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A92846 The anatomy of secret sins, presumptuous sins, sins in dominion, & uprightness. Wherein divers weighty cases are resolved in relation to all those particulars: delivered in divers sermons preached at Mildreds in Bread-street London, on Psalm 19. 12, 13. Together with the remissibleness of all sin, and the irremissibleness of the sin against the Holy Ghost preached before an honourable auditory. By that reverend and faithfull minister of the Gospel, Mr. Obadiah Sedgwick, B.D. Perfected by himself, and published by those whom he intrusted with his notes. Sedgwick, Obadiah, 1600?-1658.; Chambers, Humphrey, 1598 or 9-1662. 1660 (1660) Wing S2363; Thomason E1003_1; ESTC R203493 249,727 327

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is to it as a medicine to a disease or as water to spots or as health to sickness gradually altering healing cleansing Another is the Guilt which binds over the sinner to punishment wrath and damnation this is the object of forgiveness in it sin is not healed but pardoned the disposition of the sinner is not altered but his condition When the King pardons a thief his theft now shall not prejudice him so in Gods mercifull forgiveness sinfull guilt is so effectually removed that finally and redundantly it shall never prejudice the eternal life and salvation of the person much more might be said of this subject but I am unwilling to insist on any more then serves to inlighten the point in hand 2. Of this Forgiveness there is a Possibility you must distingush twixt the Of this forgiveness there is a possibility Infallibility of forgiveness which is not to every sin whatsoever or to any sin whatsoever without some condition A grant of actual pardon issues not out of the Court of Mercy unless persons believe and repent It is true there is an infiniteness of Divine mercy considered in it self but in the dispensation and exercise of it it is pleased to bound and confine it self to some sinners only namely to such as forsake their sins Possibility of forgiveness Though perhaps the sinner never comes actually to partake of mercy but perhaps refuseth his pardon yet is there a possibility and that in a twofold respect One In respect of God who doth not in his Word shut the door of Mercy against him nor exclude him nay so far is he from that as that he offers freely the blood of Christ which was shed for the Remission of sins Another In respect of the sinner there is except he sin the sin against the Holy Ghost a Receptivity he is not utterly uncapable he hath not such absolute contradictions to the Tenor of Divine Mercy but that God may without violation of his Glory confirm mercy on him my meaning is his condition is not peremptorily sealed up for wrath but there is a space and away for mercy and some pleas may be made for it 3. Though the sins of a person may be for their nature For what sins great for their kind gross vile abominable for their circumstances high and crying dyed over with many intensive aggravations not only surrepstitious but flagirious enormities as well as infirmities iterated as well as acted Before Conversion and after Conversion all these are capable of pardon 2. The Demonstration of the truth The Extent of Mercy The truth demonstrated from the Records of heaven in whereupon ariseth the possible pardon of all manner of sin is most evident to any considerable apprehension which can or will seriously weigh 1. The volumns and records of heaven I mean the sacred Word revealing and testifying this 1. In the commands of the vilest sinners to repent They in 1. Commands Esa 1. who for the fouleness of their wickedness are stiled Rulers of Sodom and people of Gomorrah verse 10. and their sins are called scarlet and crimson sins verse 18. yet verse 16. are called upon to repent Wash you make you clean put away the evil of you doings from before mine eyes Cease to do evil learn to do well So in Jer. 3. 1. Though their sin was spiritual Adultery they had forsaken the true God yet are they called upon to Return Now this is a truth that though the Precepts of Repentance do not imply an infallibility of the practise of Repentance yet they do imply a possibility of it and consequently of Mercy 2. In the vastness of pardoning promises the promise of 2. pardoning promises pardon is equal to Repentance Isa 55. 7. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy on him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon Here he speaks to the wicked and to the unrighteous person and indefinitely to any and every one of them and assures them if they do repent God will have mercy on them Object And whereas they might object yea but our sins are many and great Sol. He replies that God will abundantly pardon he will multiply pardon as if he had said do but repent and fear not Mercy whatever your former sins have been So in Ezek. 18. 21. If the wicked will turn from all his sins that he hath committed and keep all my statutes verse 22. All his transgressions which he hath committed they shall not be mentioned unto him Mark that phrase All the sins which he hath committed The actual grants of pardon 2. The actual grants of mercy and pardon to the greatest sinners to instance only in a few Adam was one of the greatest sinners that ever lived though not in this respect that he continued long in the practise of sin yet in a causal sence he not only committed a most high sin himself but was also the cause and occasion of all the horrible sins and dishonours against God that ever was or all the sons of men have done or will commit yet God pardoned him when he made a Covenant with him in Christ Gen. 3. Manasseh seems to be a volumn bound up with all kinds of notorious sins and with every kind of sinfull aggravation view his description in 2 Chron. 33. 3. 3. He reared up Altars for Baalim and made groves and worshipped all the hoast of heaven and served them 4. Yea In the house of God he built Altars 5 For all the hoast of heaven did he build Altars in the courts of the Multiplied Idolatry Audatious Idolatry Unnatural Idolatry house of God A most audacious Idolater who durst provoke God to his very face in bringing of the Ark and Dagon together 6. And he caused his Children to pass through the fire in the valley of the son of Hinnom 7. He offered his own Children in sacrifice to the devil 8. Also he observed times and used inchantments and witchcrafts and dealt with a familiar spirit and with Wizards and Sorcery wrought much evil in the sight of the Lord to provoke to Anger Deliberate and intentional provocation 9. He made Judah and Jerusalem to err and to do worse then the Heathens 10. And the Lord spake unto Manasseh but he would not Diffusive Idolatry hearken One would scarcely imagine that the heart of man could be Intensive Idolatry Convicted and yet obstnate the womb of such hideous villanies or that Mercy would ever respect such a sinner yet verse 12. He humbled himself greatly before the Lord. verse 13. And prayed unto him and God was intreated of him and heard his supplication Who would have risen so high in sin but a Manasseh and what mercy would have so exceedingly condescended to forgive but that of God Paul before his Conversion his sins were very high so high that as Theophilact
own Our tongues are our own said they who is Lord over us Psal 12. yea they are said to set their Note mouths against heaven q. d. what tell you us of the Lord of his displeasure or pleasure As for the word which thou hast spoken in the name of the Lord we will not do it said they in Jeremiah 44. A man doth even try it out with God and provokes him to his face and maintaines the devises of his heart against the purity and equity of Gods will 2. In presumptuous sinnings a man knows the thing and way to In them a man knows the thing to be unlawfull be unlawful and therefore the presumptuous sinner is opposed to the ignorant sinner Numb 15. not that every sinning against knowledge absolutely whatsoever is a presumptuous sinning is against knowledge and without grosse ignorance the presumptuous sinner holds a candle in one hand and draws out the sword with the other my meaning is this that he breaks through the light of knowledge discerning the way to be sinful yea and flaming upon his breast working in and checking his conscience notwithstanding all which yet he will presume to offend and proceed in transgressings 'T is true even a good man in many particulars Object may and doth sin not only against habitual but against actual knowledge but this is through infirmity not through Sol. contumacy he approves that light against the sinne and doth not maintaine the sinne against his light yea he yeelds not only by approbation of judgement but also by resolution and desire of will to imitate the light yet through the weaknesse of his power and from the force of an hasty temptation he may fall down even at noon-day but the presumptuous sinner sees light as an enemy and therefore willingly breaks through it to the way of his sinne yea he makes his heart to uphold the sin against the force of his knowledge and drives back the arguments with a resolution that however he will have his sin 3. The presumptuous sinner in that kinde of sinning adventures He adventures against express threatnings against express threa●nings thus it stands with a man his heart and Satan incline and egge him to sinne but God and Conscience stand in the way against him as he said of Note the sword to Joab Knowest thou not that it will be bitternesse in the end so God saith to him thou shalt not have peace in this way it is the thing which I hate and abhorre and I have revealed wrath from heaven against it but in presumption the sinning soul steps over the threatning to the committing of the sin that sword of God which may keep back another man yet though God sets the point of it to the breast of a presumptuous sinner it will not stave him off from adventuring therefore the presumptuous sinner is said to blesse himself in his heart though God threatens a curse Deut. 29. this is a truth that a presumptuous sinner is not changed by mercies nor affrighted by threats but as the Leviathan in Job laughs at the shaking of the speare so the heart of a presumptuous sinners puffs at all divine warnings and menaces come said they let it come that we may see him As there is not a love to the goodness of God so there is not a fear of the greatness of God in presumption 4. Presumptuous sins do arise from a false confidence there are two They arise from a false confidence Of the facility of mercy things upon which the presuming sinner doth imbolden himself 1. One is the facility of mercy when a man sets mercy against sinne he doth well because Gods mercies should draw our hearts off from sinne but when a man sets mercy against Justice now he offends yet thus doth the presumtuous sinner perhaps there is not in every presumptuous sinner such a spirit of Atheistical madnesse that he is absolutely carelesse of all that God threatens nor is he so miserably prodigal of his soul that he rejoyceth to have it damned no he may and sometimes doth apprehend threatnings yea so that his heart is caused to demurre it may be a stopping apprehension i. such as may make him study how to pursue his sinne and yet to wave and decline the edge of the sharp threatning and this he doth by opposing mercy to justice 't is true this is a sinne and divine justice will not take it well but I will adventure on it hoping that divine mercy will pacifie the rigor of the threatning I will sin and offend Justice but then I will decline that Court by flying to the Mercy-seat God is of a gentle heart easie to be entreated and will be presently satisfied and appeased Just like a man who will break his bones because he trusts to have them quickly set by a skilful Chirurgion or like a lewd child who adventures to outrages upon the scope and allowance of his fathers good nature This ground of presumption God fully intimates in Deut. 29. 19. when he heareth the words of the curse that he blesse himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of mine heart to adde drunkenness to thirst c. Beloved this is certain that presumption disposeth of mercy beyond all allowance and writes a pardon which God will never allow nor seal it will dare to runne in debt upon a conceit of a discharge and clearing however as if Divine mercy were nothing else but a present untwining of all the knots which we make and a crossing of debts as soon as entred and served for no other end but that men should be bold to sinne and cheerful after the commission of it But verily mercy is more precious then so 2. Another is the self possibility and strength of future repentance Of the self possibility of future repentance he is one of the worst patients in a way of sinning who is confident that he can be his own Physician no soul wounds it self more then that which vainly thinks that it can presently cure them presumption is not alwayes carried upon an absolute hope of mercy but the sinner being more piercingly understanding knows that mercy is a special Charter and such a balme as is spread only upon a returning and humbling soule here it is that this presumptuous person will adventure to sinne upon a confidence that he will notwithstanding all this fashion and polish his soul to a meet capacity of mercy by hereafter repentings and humblings he doth foolishly delude his soul with a fancy of such things which exceed his power There are two things which the sinner cannot assure himself of One is the lengthning of his life for this candle is lighted and put out not according to our desires but according to divine pleasure all life hath its limits from the Lord of life and death he who sinnes to day cannot be assured that he shall live till to morrow Now
Corruption is in us all and it is with it as with a Child in the womb which would be breaking out into the world or as with fire kindled within which would be flaming abroad such an aptness is there in our sinfull inclinations to secret and then to open actings Now the Cohibition the inclosing the locking of them in is properly Restraint 4. All Restraint of sin is from God That God whom David here desires to hold or keep him back did also All restraint of sin is from God with-hold Abimelech keep in Laban keep up Esau keep off Saul and it is granted that there are several means and ways of restraint natural moral spiritual as you shall hear anon but it is God in them which causeth restraint he imprints Note such a vigour into those Arguments into those Apprehensions that they shall bind and chain and hold in the nature which else would not judge so seriously nor submit so easily to impedition or hinderance as the horse rusheth into the battle if left to his own swing and violence so the heart of man if left to it self it would put no periods to wickedness but would grow from evil to worse and fill up all the measures of iniquity There should not be one righteous Abel but every Cain would kill him not a Jacob but Esau would pursue him not a David but Saul would hunt him not an Apostle but Herod would be-head him All Christian Religion would lie in blood yea and the very order of nature would sink into confusion by the efficacy of that sinfull corruption which is equally divided amongst all if God did not look down from heaven and restrain the rage of sin in all 5. All evil men are not equally restrained by God which All evil men are not equally restrained appears both in the matter and in the measures of sinning some evill men do not break out into all horrible kinds of sin some though they be at the same school of particular sinning are not yet in the same form and height or degree of sin though they be at the same trade yet their skill and thriving in the same sin is different Every Drunkard is not the mighty man to drink and every swearer lets not his tongue loose to the highest blast of Blasphemy There is no man so high in sin but if God should cease to restrain him he would yet plunge himself into a deeper guilt 6. The restraining of any sinner is an Act of a mercifull Providence unto him Gods Justice begins already to smoak against Restraining of the sinner is an act of merciful Providence a man when he totally leaves the rains unto him when he gives him up to himself to his own vile affections reprobate mind to his own Counsels and wayes and will no more strive with him but cast him off to himself But it is a great Mercy when he restrains though renewing grace be the saving Mercy yet restraining grace is a great Mercy when God will not let a mans sinfull corruption take its full walk for restraint diminisheth guilt whereas if this bridle were off a man would increase his sinfull accounts by infinite iterations and multiplications of sinning Now he is kept from inlarging his debts yea and it diminisheth sin whereas a man let loose would diffuse sin cast his fire-brands about draw others to a consociation of evil and so set up the trade now by restraint sinning is more contracted and narrowed yea and it diminisheth wrath and judgement for according to the number and measures of sinning there shall be an equal proportion of vengeance and punishment the greater sinner shall have and feel the sharper flames of hell but now restraint keeps in the sin and at least makes it less sinfull for as sin sticking in the inclination is not so deep as that which flies out of that into actings and consummations and so consequently is a means to lessen the heat of future torment 7. God doth restrain the good and the bad from sin The evil man God doth restrain both the good and the bad from sin is so wholly carried by a sinfull nature that if God did not keep him back he would bring all to confusion The good man is so weakly good that if God did not prevent and interpose and with-hold he could not with-stand so much evil as now he doth How great a Mercy did David acknowledge a Restraint from sin to be you may see in his own words 1 Sam. 25. 32. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel which hath sent thee this day to meet me Verse 33. And blessed be thy advice and blessed be thou which hast kept me this day from shedding innocent blood The Father hath two Children one young and the other old if he doth not keep in the elder he will be like the Prodigal sell all and be riotous if he doth not hold in the other he will fall and be like Mephibosheth lame on both feet Evil men have strong corruptions which God is pleased many times many wayes to keep within door he will not suffer all their intentions desires projects to see the light Good men have weak graces their own legs are not able to bear them up and strong temptations and occasions may soon lay flat a weak defendant and therefore God is pleased yet to bridle in that remaining corruption to keep off the soul or something off from the soul lest it should sin we see it in experience that grace alone is not able to keep off sin Grace can keep us whiles God keeps the grace but if God leaves us to the assayes of our own best strength we are unequal Combatants in the field 8. God doth diversly keep back or restrain men from particular God doth diversly restrain men from sin By enlivening of Conscience sins and sinnings sometimes 1. By inliv●ning the con●cience which being st●ictly awakened riseth to such an height of impatience and choler and rage that the sinner is willing to let go the sinning rather then to answer the scourging inditements and threats of conscience for it As the luxurious patient though he likes the sparkling wine yet he dares not drink it lest his spirit should be thereby inflamed and burn him up even an evil man though he be not af●aid of sin yet he may be afraid of conscience and may therefore be kept back from his sinning as the Colliar from handling his coals not because they are coals By self-reflecting apprehensions but because they are burning hot 2. By self-reflecting apprehensions the love that a man hath to himself may be a means to keep him off from some sinfull actings for some sinning have such infamy and charge and envy and loss and danger indorsed on them that the very present arrearages of sin do prevail and keep off the man from adventuring he will not strike the bargain for payment so sharp and sure and present 3. By l●gal
imprintings God is pleased many times to set By legal imprintings up the flaming sword and the shadows of hell before the eyes of a daring sinner tells him plainly that he will call him to an account and wrath shall be his portion if he will not forbear thus to provoke him whereupon he forbears 4. By denying and crossing opportunities when a man hath By denying opportunities prepared himself for a sin then God doth so secretly direct the wayes and the eyes and the presence of other creatures that the sinner must keep in the cup which he hath tempered and dares not draw the sword with which he is girded nor act the evil which he did before earnestly intend to prosecute and finish The sinner doth not always sin not that he wants an heart but because he hath not a conveniency as the ship ridged may be wind-bound though the greediness of sin thrusts on the sinner yet the wisdom of the flesh will keep it in till the season of sinning may sutably match with the former contrivances of sin Esau deferred to slay his brother Jacob till Isaac died 5. By denying or with-holding of temptations Beloved By with-holding temptations Though evil men are under the power of the Prince of the Air yet I conjecture not in this sense that they may tempt them when and how he pleaseth or that they must necessarily act every sin to which he tempts them But as God is pleased when Satan doth many times tempt them yet sometimes to restrain them so he is pleased when Satan would tempt them many times to restrain them well knowing that his temptations would easily draw out matter already prepared An heart which hath won it self to a sin may without any more ado by the very presence of a temptation and occasion be instantly wrought unto it 6. By causing Diversions which may call aside the imployment By causing diversions of the sinner another way As when Saul in malice raised a persecution against David and had hemmed him in God yet restrained Saul by letting in the Philistines upon his County with-drew back the execution of his ragefull intention against David at that time 7. Lastly By beginning and supporting and inlarging the By a principle of sanctification principle of sanctification which is the sweetest restraint of the heart from sin drawing it off inabling it against inclinations and temptations and such a kind of holding back doth David pray for in this place viz. a sanctifying restraint a renewing restraint a subduing Restraint 9. The restraining of good men are exceeding different from The restraints of good men are different from those of evil men They differ those of evil men though the sins from which either are restrained may be common yet the keeping back of one by renewing Grace and of the other by meer restraining grace are very different v. g. 1. They differ in the fountain for keeping off by meer restrainings proceed from the care of universal providence but In the fountain keeping back by renewings comes from a special affection of God in Christ God hath an eye over all his works and a mercy over them too he doth not totally leave no not the sinfull Creature but expresseth a Providence in permissions of somethings contradiction of many things restriction of many things and ordination of all things though men be desperately evil and as it were the lords of sin yet God will be known for ever to be the Lord of nature by circumscribing and abridging and commanding it in its propensions But the keeping back by renewing grace this doth arise from a tender love a most gracious affection which God bears to his servanrs like the Father with-holding of his dear Child from a sword which might hurt him or meat which might make him sick The restrainings of evil men are from the Wisdome of divine In the form of impression power and the cohibitions of good men are from the goodness of special favour They differ again in the form of Impression for restraint of evil men arise only from argument but those of good men depend upon nature as well as argument In the former it is argument alone which makes the stop In the latter it is argument and nature both as Abner said ro Asahel 2 Sam. 2. 22. If I should smite thee how should I look thy brother Joab in the face there was naked argument How can I do this gr●at evil and sin against God as Jos●ph said to his Mistriss Genesis 39. 9. there was a divine Argument and an holy nature bid a man to grasp a toad his very nature shrinks back from this bid him climb by a little rope to the top of an high mast in the midst of the sea and here Argument or reason may withhold him it is one thing for a new Argument to keep off an old heart it is another thing for a new nature to keep back from an opposite corruption 3. They differ in their entrance and seizure The Restrainings of evil men are but as locks upon the out-door and In their entrance and seizure the keeping back of good men is as the lock upon the Closet one is an impedite to the actions the other is an impedite to the inclinations one is a bridle upon the lips and hands the other is a bond upon the heart and disposition the one may seal up the lips that a man doth not swear the other tempers the heart that a man fears an oath 4. They differ in their Efficacy Restrainings of evil men do In their Efficacy not impair the state of sin no more then chains and prisons do the nature of the thief or Lyons Look as it was with the fire into which the three Children was cast the restraining of its burning Act did no way prejudice either the nature of the fire or the faculty of it to burn only it did suspend the act so it is with meer Restraints about moral things though it doth give a Supersedeas to the evil act for the present yet it grants not a Capias corpus the body of sin is all one as before But in the keeping back of a good man there is not only an inter-let of the Act but some measure of diminution to the sinfull inclination 5. They differ in the fairness of equality Meer Restraints In the fairness of equality do not deal justly with sins they make a stop in one and leave open a gap for other sins like a vessel of many holes though the water break not out in one place because it is stopt yet it freely flies out in the rest so where a man is restrained only though that sin cannot find a way in that vein yet it will find a course like the water which is hindred under ground another way But the holdings back by renewing grace do indispose generally and evenly 6. They differ in the fulness of duration for
temptation hath been his conquest yet his sinning shall be his trouble weak strength in grace though it be not alwayes actually sufficient to prevent sin yet it will be able to melt the soul for it if temptation hath surprized the soul to sin grace wi●l then surprise the soul to mourne neither will it lie with sin upon it Even a weak child thrown down will be scrambling up or crying for some to raise it But if the places of our fall be the places of our peace and of our rest it is a bad signe that our sinnings exceed infirmities when the sinning is to us as the sea to the fish or as the centre to the stone or as the bed to the labouring man this is no infirmity Fifthly in sinful acts of infirmities the heart as it intends not sin it condemns sin the heart is more sensible watchful prayerful In infirmities the heart is against sin against it and exceedingly strives to mortifie it and subdue it SECT VI. 3. Of Exhortation A Third Use shall be to exho●t us to imitate holy David Exhortation to be carefull to be kept back from presumptuous sins Consider It is a great judgement to be left to our selves in a care against presumptuous sinnes and to be kept back from them Consider seriously a few things 1. It is a great judgement to be left to our selves to be given up to a mans own heart to be given up to Satan to be given up to vile affections to a reprobate sense to our own councels and wayes As if God should say to a person I have dealt with thee by my mercies but thou wilt be unrighteous still I have dealt with thee by my ●udgements but thou Note wilt hold fast thy wickedness still I have dealt with thee by my word and counsels but thou wilt proceed on in thy sinning still I have dealt with thee by my spirit in many convictions and motions but thou wilt sinne still I have dealt with thee by reproofs and checks and troubles of conscience but thy heart is set in thee to sin still Since thou wilt be unrighteous thou shalt be unri●hteous still since thou wilt be filthy thou shalt be so stil● I will leave thee unto the hands of Satan who works mightily in the chil●ren of disobedience and he shall take thee captive at his pleasure I will leave thee to the vilenesse of thy own sinful nature that since thou wilt not hearken unto me thou shalt as thou desirest with all greediness fulfil the lust thereof but I will withdraw from thee in my mercy and in my loving care go on and fill up the measure of thy iniquity and of wrath why brethren this is a sad and forlorn condition what is the estate of the patient when the Physician gives him off and relinquisheth him to his own sick palate and his own vain appetite and diet why saith he physick will do him no good it is in vain to presc●ibe him rules let him do on take what he will I see well he is a dead man thus it is with him whom God leaves unto himself Surely there is not a more direful judgement then for God to give over his keeping of us whither will not our wicked hearts carry us what will not sinne left to it self dare to do how outragiously will it swell how irrecoverably will it sink the soul all helps are little enough to bound and keep in sinne but if it be left to its own force and violence then like the sea without a shore what a deluge it makes 2. To sinne upon presumptuous grounds upon a presumption To sin upon a presumption of Mercy is the next way to cut off from mercy of mercy is the next way to cut us off from mercy Knowest thou not O man that the kindnesse and long-suffering and mercy of God should lead thee to repentance but thou through thy hardnesse and impenitency of thy heart treasurest unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2. 4 5. God will not be merciful to the wicked transgressor but he will wound the hairy scalp of such a one who goes on still in his sins Mercy is a sweet City of refuge to the penitent sinner but justice will tear off the presumptuous sinner even from the hornes of the Altar God never yet said that he would forgive him who will not leave his sins do not flatter thy self thou doest forsake thy mercies unlesse thou wilt forsake thy sins God will not spare thee nor pity thee 3. Presumptuous sinning makes high work for the soul The Presumptuous sinning makes high work for the soul pricks of a pinne the cut of a knife may do much hurt but the gash of a sharp sword forcibly followed this will open death in thy sides Every sin fetcheth blood in the soul but presumptuous sinnings do even cleave the conscience asunder be thou good or bad who mounts up in an high kinde of sinning good Lord how it will in a day of judicial sense make the very sinewes to crack and thy joynts to tremble Of all sensible wrackings in the soul there is not any one comparable to that of despaire O! despaire it is the death Note pang of the conscience it is the soul in the Extremity of amazing throwes it sees no heaven and no shore but lays the soul either in hell or ready to be cast quick into it now presumptuous sinnings prepare the way for despair when the soul would have its sinful course it would not be beaten off by any method and warning of heaven but went on in a secure confidence of the easinesse and largenesse of mercy when God will not take these proud braveries any longer but arrest the stout transgressor and set his sins in order both for the greatnesse of fact and height of pride and darings and that against all light and goodnesse and warning and threatning and the sinner sees himself fallen into the hands of a terrible and glorious God from whose fierce displeasure it cannot now rid it self O cries out the miserable man what shall I do woe to me that ever I was borne I have shut up heaven against my self I am rejected for ever as I have dealt with God so now he deals with me I would not hearken to him and now he will not hearken to me O I shall never have mercy I have adventured on so presumptuously that I have distinguished my self from any hope and possibility of recovery I was intreated but still I would sin I was warned but still I would sinne I saw it to be sinful but I would do it I felt some trouble for it but c. I despised counsel and scorned reproof I slighted mercy I quenched motions and these so often O Lord now thou hast met with me now shall I never rise any more I would have my sinnes and I have them still and I shall have thy just wrath and hell with them too
seeme a mercy if of a cruell Tyrant that would seem a mercy if of a desperate enemy if of bonds if of a sickness what then is it to be rid of the rule of sin which is infinitely worse then all these Fourthly no Lord so bad and no command soe vile as those of sin in dominion Therefore blesse God for your deliverance No Lord so bad or commandes so vile as those of sin in dominion you whose soules are through the mighty graciousnesse of a good God rescued from the powers of darknesse Tell me what are your thoughts what your judgements what your troubles for the workings of your vanquished enemy if the weakned corruptions appeare yet so vile what were your raigning corruptions If sin be so monstrous unto you now only in remptation what was it heretofore in dominion if the finger be so heavy what were the loynes if a particular action doth as you imagine expose you so dangerously what did the service of sin do under what displeasures of wrath lay your soules when sin had fullest affection and compleat to obedience Rebekah seemed weary of her life because of the presence of the Daughters of Heth If the presence created such an affliction what might the conjunction and union have done verily if sin be as it is bad and troublesome in combate O it is infinitely worse in the throne and absolute Empire over the soule wherein every faculty serves it with all its strength and madly strives how to dishonour God breaks his law resists his spirit to fulfill lusts and please the devill and to damne the soule O blesse the Lord for his goodnesse to thee that yet the dominion of sin is off T is true corruption yet remaines but yet it remaines not as a Lord but as a Tyrant not as a king but as an enemy time was that sin had thy love but now thou hatest it time was that sin had thy minde to devise for it but now those imaginations are cast down time was that thy will was espoused to sin but now a divorce is sued out time was that thy members were ready enough to fullfil the lusts of the flesh but now they are made servants of righteousnesse time was that thou didest sell thy selfe to wickednesse and was never so joyfull as when thou wast sinfull but now it is not so thou art a drudge a slave a vassall no longer thy former wayes amaze thee and the present Commands of sin are an affliction to thee O blesse the Lord c. 5. Again if the dominion of sin be off then assuredly the scepter If dominion of sin be off then the septer of Christ is set up in thy soul of Christ is set up in thy soul Beloved the soule stands not abides not in a middle estate it must have some one Lord or other it is necessarily under some one dominion either of sin or of Christ and this know that the dominion of sin cannot be taken off in the soul but by a contrary by a better by a stronger dominion by that of Christ who dispossesseth the strong man It is he who hath changed thy heart who hath made thy heart to chang its Master who hath drawn off thy love thy service c. Now no dominion in the world like that of Christ No dominion like Christs None so holy 1. None so holy hee is holy love holinesse and all his commands are righteous 2. None so Gracious he doth not exact beyond what he gives So gracious and will yet mercifully pardon our true endeavors of service wherein they fall short 3. None so peaceable his very service is a kind of wages to the obedient a vassal to sin is like a man labouring all day about Soe peaceable thornes and nettles the more abundance of them grasped Simile by him galls him with the more wounds and paines no man can be long cheerfully sinfull either Terrour or feare accompanies most sinnings but the service of Christ hath warrant from the word and peace from conscience 4. None so afflicted his commands are accompanied with So afflicted strength and spirit he bids us to do the worke and gives us his owne hand thereto imposeth duty and Imprinteth ability writes the law to the eare and writes it also in the heart 5. None so rewarded no man serves Christ too much or for Soe rewarded nought Though all our work be but duty yet he payes us rich wages we owe unto Christ all our strength and the use of all our graces neither doe we bring in so much of these in full service as we should yet our good Lord and Master will give us if we be faithfull servants at night our penny and at the last our crowne 6. Lastly be thankfull for if dominion be off then damnation is off There is no condemnation saith Paul to them that are in If dominon of sin be off damnation is off Christ Jesus who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit Rom 8. 1. A man is not damned meerly because he hath sin for then no man could be saved for who is the man that sinneth not but because sin is his Lord and he is the servant of sin Not so much because he is bad but because he will be bad not only for the act but for the love T is confessed that guilt is as naturall to sin as the shaddow is to the body no man can sin at any time in any thing and yet be Innocent But meritorious guilt is one thing and redounding guilt is another thing If the dominion of sin be broken off that a man loves not sin but hates it yeelds not up himselfe unto it but resists it is not in league but in conflict with it then the estate of guilt is taken off so that it shall not effectually redound to the condemnation of the person where God doth powerfully subdue the sinfull nature there he will mercifully pardon and discharge the unwillingly sinning and offending person if sin be not thy Lord then Hell shall not be thy portion He who is become an enemy to his sins grace rules in his heart now and glory shall crowne his soule hereafter Obj. But will some troubled and therefore unably discerning soule reply we doubt it not But that it is a most singular Doubts of troubled soules fearing they are still under the Dominion of sin mercy A rich grace worthy of greatest acceptance and heartiest thankes where the dominion of sin is broken off but alas we feare it is not so with us heavy cause have we to suspect that we are captives yet under sins dominion so that though others who can happily observe the yoke broken off and therefore can be chearfully thankfull we finde it yet strong O very strong and therefore more reason have we of griefe and sorrow Beloved it is granted that if a man findes himselfe indeed Sol. under the dominion of any sin assuredly
division let something come unto the soule which makes a division sin will quickly lose its dominion It must be something may gaine the affections It must be something that must breed a strife Directions Look up to God and Christ 3. Againe It must be something which may gaine the affections it must be able to winn the heart to dispose of love and hatred for dominion is made or marred by one of them 4. Againe it must be something which may breed a stiffe and couragious resolution that the heart will not serve sin but will go free And hereupon against all inward and outward opposition breakes forth into the use of victorious meanes Now then the directions are these 1. If ever thou wouldest get down the dominion of sin thou must looke up to God and Christ they are able to disanull the covenant with sin and to subdue iniquities Rom. 8. 2. the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death looke as it must be a Rich mercy which pardons so it must be a mighty power which conquers sin why but what is it to the Lord to command thy heart home to himselfe to cast down the high imaginations and strong holds As Jehosaphat spake against those strong armies we know not what to doe yet our eyes are upon thee soe in the sense of thy naturall vileness and sinfull dominion O Lord I am bound I am in bondage I am dead in sins Lord I am unable to escape but thou art able to deliver O deliver my soule for thy mercies sake and subdue mine iniquities and shew forth thy power c who shall deliver me I thanke God through Jesus Christ Rom. 7. 24 25. Secondly because meer power doth not do it but power in a quality working through some quality Therefore beg of Beg the grace of Gods spirit God that he would give thee the grace of his spirit it is true that naked power takes not off the sinfull dominion nor doth the quality alone doe it but both can doe it If God gives a man grace and mightily asists and workes by and through that grace this now will beat downe ●he dominion of sinne The light though it be but a little at first yet asisted by a mighty principle of light shall conquer darknesse pride will have dominion till humility comes in Now then beg of God for grace for his holy spirit for another heart for a new heart and a new spirit Thirdly labour earnestly for faith if two things were done Labour for faith sin could not possibly continue in dominion viz. If Christ did rule in the soule If thy love were drawn off from sin But faith sets up the scepter of Christ it will know no Lord but Christ my Lord and my God said believing Thomas And faith turnes the love to Christ makes Christ the center of the heart O it represents such goodnesse such excellency such propriety such bounty such love in Christ as inflames the heart and knits it with love to Christ again Nay to add to all this faith bestowes the life on Christ too He died for me said faith I judge it therefore most reasonable that I should live to him Now where Christ comes to rule and hath love and life there sinne without all doubt looseth its dominion 4. Lastly take a couragious resolution we are held many times by our lusts through a faintnesse of spirit why we shall Take a couragious resolution never get down these sins and what will people say and we know not what to do Sol. Why up and be doing for what is past the Lord will mercifully pardon all of it if now the yoke be broken and be consident of this if thou art setting against thy sins thou doest that which God likes very well for he hath commanded thee it as a duty and hath set out meanes and promised his helpe and blessing Therefore stand not hovering and hammering were I best shall I shall I yet O no thy life lies upon this or thy death Therefore resolve on it to set against thy sins say this with thy selfe if I suffer sin to rule thus I perish for ever if I get off the dominion I live for ever if I continue in this sinfull estate I must bid God farwell and Christ farwell and heaven and all the comforts of my poor soul farwel I confess I may get a little pleasure by my sins a little profit by my sins but I am not sure to enjoy them one moment and why should I venture eternity of misery for one draught of sinful water If I could get off sins dominion O what a God might I look on plead with sue unto what a Saviour should I get what precious joys what heavenly consolations what peace here what hopes for hereafter well come of it what will though I have been sinful I will not still continue so to God will I come to Christ will I goe I will beseech them to have mercy upon me a sinner and to give me grace and to change my heart I will not serve my base lusts any longer I will never leave praying hearing reading studiing inquiring working till I be delivered from this bondage and translated into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God Against actuall dominion Wherein actual dominion lies 2. Against Actuall dominion Thus for directions Against the natural dominion of sin Now I proceed to some helpes against actual dominion which is the particular prevalency of a sinne into act Let me premise a proposition or two and then you shall have the special directions themselves 1. Actual Dominion I speak in respect of grosse acts is usually in respect of some particular lusts which works with more strength in the soul then any other lusts Though it be most true that in every man there is an universal root of sinning yet you finde it in experience that the multitudes of sinful inclinations and thoughts and temptations run ordinarily in some peculiar way with most frequency and violence Secondly actual Dominion is ordinarily by such a sin which hath the advantage of a natural complexion and outward condition and occasions and affections upon these doth sinne set the temptation as an Enginer doth place his battery upon such a Simile piece of ground which doth best advantage and further his shot against a City A mans natural temper and complexion doth mightily facilitate his acts and a mans calling or condition of life may accidentally be a forcible perswasion to him to much infidelity and impatience and indirectness And occasions in conversing actively or passively have infinite baits in them and when our affections may run in some lawful measure and manner there sin takes occasion to tempt and prevaile with ease if we look not to it he may quickly be cast down by a sinful temptation who is already prepared thereunto by a sinful faction Therefore if
and others well observe they had but one ingredient to stave them off from being the sin against the Holy Ghost viz. Ignorance 1 Tim. 1. 13. he presents a brief survey of his great transgressions He was a Blasphemer i. one who did cast contumely and reproach on God and Christ whose nature was Divine and therefore every way venerable but he scoffed and mocked at Christ and his Truths He was a Persecutor too he did not only deride Ch●ist but endeavoured to exile and banish him out of the world to thrust him away from the society of sinners who in so great mercy came to save sinners Whereupon St. Austin judged well Nemo acrior Paulo inter Persecutores nemo ergo pejor inter peccatores Paul was the quickest persecutor and therefore the vilest sinner Nay and he was injurious he did not only exercise his thoughts and heart his tongue and invectives against Christ but his hand and strength he did consent to the death of persons for Christ To have a hand in blood is a crying sin but how heinous is it to have a hand in the blood of Christ to crucifie him afresh in his members yet saith he I obtained mercy A blasphemer yet I obtained mercy A Persecutor yet I obtained mercy Injurious yet I obtained mercy I will give you but one instance more out of 1 Cor. 6. 9. Neither fornicators nor Idolaters nor Adulterers not effeminate nor Abusers of themselves with mankind verse 10. Nor thieves nor covetous nor Drunkards nor Revilers nor Extortioners shall inherit the kingdom of God Here are some sinners which have destroyed a whole world and others which have started up hell on earth to devour sinners and all of them such as meritoriously shut the gate of happiness yet mercy hath stretched out the Scepter to some persons guilty of them Verse 11. And such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God 3. The essential and natural disposition of God The Essential and natural disposition of God Mercy is not a quality extrinsecally imposed or acquired but intrinsecal and most natural and therefore exerciseable with freest facility and readiest constancy The eye is not weary with seeing nor God with pardoning because that is natural to the eye and this is to God This you know the power of any thing is answerable to the nature The nature of God is infinite and so is his power Omnipotente Medico nullus insanabilis occurrit languor saith Isidore Pelusiota And St. Austin Grave est quod habeo sed ad Omnipotentem fugio In Psal 51. Therefore is it that his Mercies are stiled Riches of mercies and multitudes of mercies and great mercies and compared to the depths of the sea Mic. 7. and to the strength of the sun Isa 44. and to the vastness of the heavens in comparison of the earth Isa 55. As Mercifulness is natural in him so is it gracious The Lord mercifull and gracious Exod. 34. If mercy were to be bought there were no hope for any sinner but being free now there is a possibility for any A sinner may plead for mercy even out of the goodness of mercy As it is disp●nsed graciously without desert on our part so likewise delightfully without repining on Gods part He delighteth in Mercy saith the Prophet Mic. 7. 18. It is a work that God would do Two things God delights in Our Conversion and our Remission 4. The vertue and sufficiency of the blood of Christ which was shed for the remission of sins Mat. 26. 28. that was The vertue and sufficiency of the blood of Christ one end to procure our pardon but for what sins that is not expressed because no sin is excluded you cannot say that Christ dyed only for small sins or only for great sins nay the offer of Christ to all sinners doth confirm it How can this offer be indefinite How can it be said Whosoever believes shall be saved unless you grant a possibility of mercy 5. The effects of mercy in the Creature which point to an infinite fulness in the Creator The vertue in the cause ever The effects of Mercy in the Creature exceeds that in the effect and according to the generality in the cause is the intention of the vertue in that cause If I discern any light in the beams I apprehend much more in the Sun If I feel any moisture in smaller drops I know there is much more in the large ocean All the mercy in the Creature is derivative and as so many beams and drops lead us to the infinite fulness of mercy in God the universal and prime fountain of all compassion God himself reasons from the compassion of a mother to her own and Christ tells us If we forgive those that trespass against us our heavenly Father will also forgive us our trespasses Surely if we must forgive seventy times God doth much more multiply forgivenesses 6. It is all one to the Lord to forgive great sins as well as small It is all one to God to forgive great as well as small sins Luke 7. 41. There was a Creditor which had two Debtors the one ought him 500. pence and the other 50. pence and when they had nothing to pay he frankly forgave them both There was a difference of the debt 50. and 500. one of them many hundred times exceeding the other the debts were different but the forgiveness was equal and the manner of forgiveness the easiness was alike both of them was frankly i freely readily forgiven Now I proceed to the application of all this Is there a Use possibility for the pardon of any sin Information 1. An impenitent sinner is utterly inexcusable who will continue in sin where so much grace doth abound I do confess that An impenitent sinner is utterly inexcusable many turn the grace of God into wantonness and because of the richness readiness of divine mercy therefore presume to add drunkenness to thirst giving the reins to all licentiousness and obduration of Spirit and why because God is mercifull But hear what the Apostle saith Rom. 2. Knowest thou not O man that the mercies of God should lead thee to Repentance but thou through the hardness and impenitency of thy heart treasurest unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath I pray you to remember 1. That the end of mercy is not confirmation in sin but a Reformation of sin There is mercy with thee therefore shalt thou be feared said David 2. That Mercy is the sweetest cord to draw us off from sin When God might justly doom a sinner yet he graciously presents his mercy to pardon him Loe yet there is mercy I beseech thee by the mercies of God to leave thy sins this is a melting argument 3. That Mercy is the strongest argument to draw men off from Sin The torments of hell cannot work
so much as the mercies of heaven Nothing in the world will prevail upon a sinner if mercy doth not 4. If mercy doth not prevail a mans Damnation befalls him without all Apology Ah what a sad appearing will it be for us when we must die and stand before God and the Lord shall in that day object to us before men and Angels This is the person unto whom I freely offered the pardon of all the sins that ever he committed and offered him in the word of God that if he would leave his sins I would forgive them but he preferred his sins before my mercy For lying vanities he forsook his mercies And thy own conscience shall then testifie that thus it was I had mercy offered again and again and yet I would continue in my sins Judge what blackness of darkness and degrees of eternal confusion thou shall contract when so great a door of mercy is opened but for a lust sake thou wilt not enter in thou wilt not accept of it 2. Then no sinner hath cause sufficient to despair I know full well that before God makes us sensible of sin we are apt to No sinner hath cause sufficient to despair presume but being once made sensible we are very apt to despair It is the great art of the devil either to make us die in a senceless calm or else to perish in an unquiet storm either to make us undervalew our sins and so to slay us with security or else to undervalew mercy and so to sink us with despair Oh saith the awakened conscience my sins are so many and so great I have continued long in them gone on in them after knowledge after the invitations of mercy after the strokes of afflictions after many a secret check and bitter words from my conscience now there remains no hope no no others whose sins are fewer in number lightet in weight not edged and raised by such circumstances they may hope but I can have no confidence mercy will never look upon such a one as I am Nay but readest thou not the Text and they are the words of a Saviour That all manner of sin may find forgiveness though there because enough to despair of thy own strength yet there is no cause to despair of Gods mercy Two things only remember here 1. Despair is no remedy to any sinner It may bind on his sins the faster but never heals the soul nor easeth the conscience nor pleaseth God 2. Whatsoever thy sins have been if at length thou canst find an heart to repent God can find mercy to pardon I affirm it no sinner ever perished because God wanted skill to help but because he wanted a heart to make use of his help To perswade men to make out for pardon 3. But the main use I would make of this point is To perswade men to make out for this pardon you see here the extent of Mercy the possibility of pardon Why do you look one upon another said Jacob to his sons Behold I have heard there is corn in Egypt get you down thither that we may live and not die Why stand you amazed and backward you that are so full of spiritual wants why come you not to mercy that you may live and not die here is a store-house of mercy Behold said the servants of Benhadab We have heard that the King of Israel is a mercifull King let us go to him peradventure he will save thy life 1 King 20. 31. We hear that the King of heaven is mercifull and yet we address not our selves unto him we hear that there is Balm in Gilead yet we sue not to be healed we hear that the Arms of Christare yet open and we run not to be embraced Ah! our folly and madness that being so greatly diseased we fly our Physick that being so in deep rebellions we lay not down our weapons and submit not upon the tender of the freest pardon As I live saith the Lord I delight not in the death of a sinner Why will you die O house of Israel Why do we by lying vanities forsake our Mercies how my soul bleeds at the wretched hardness of our hearts God is mercifull and we are sinfull yea we are the more bold in sin because God is the more abundant in mercy Continue in sin because Grace doth abound Rom. 6. 1. Thus do we abuse the grace God to wantonness and bane our souls by the sweet Remedy of sin There is mercy with thee that thou mayest be feared said David and he who confesseth and forsaketh his sins shall have mercy saith Solomon and knowest thou not that the mercies of God should lead thee to Repentance saith Paul consider 1. The presence of Mercy saves not but the acceptance the offer of a pardon delivers not the Malefactor but the receiving of it only the embracing makes us happy mercy proves not mercy but by acceptance the contempt of it strangly alters it into Justice 2. The despising of mercy leaves without all excuse what hast thou to urge against God who could not urge and fasten his mercy on thy soul yes thou wouldst have a licence but not a pardon I know thou warmest thy soul with the sound of mercy not to abate but to encourage thy sinfull appetite Why dost thou not break thy arm because there is a skilfull Chirurgion or fall into the strongest diseases because there is a skilfull Physitian 3. Continuance in sin and efficacy of Mercy are inconsistent thou through thy impenitent heart in stead of mercy treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2. 5. Now that which I would perswade you too is to be wise for Get your sins to be forgiven your souls and to get your sins to be forgiven and pardoned If a company of sick men did hear of an able Physitian that could and would heal them who would not be carried to him or what Malefactor is there so out-ragiously mad but that would make out to the King if he were assured that the King would pardon him Two things only I will propound Motives and Means 1. The Motives to stir us up to get our sins forgiven are these Motives 1. We are in such a case that we need pardon yea that pardon We need pa●don should be multiplied unto us Indeed were we not sinners then we should need no forgiveness or could we of our selves make or exact satisfaction to divine Justice then might we stand off from mercy but alas we are sinners by nature and by life all our dayes are days of sin the hairs are not more on our heads then the number of our sins are on our consciences they are so many that who can tell how often he offendeth therefore we need mercy to forgive yea and we are without strength we can find strength to sin but who can discharge for those sins the price and ransom could never yet be found in any sinners
if he should take the brightest candle to search all the records of his soul yet many of them would escape his notice And indeed this is a great part of our misery that we cannot understand all our debts we can easily see too many yet many more lie as it were dead and out of sight To sin is one great misery and then to forget our sins is a misery too If in repentance we could set the battel in array point to every individual sin in the true and particular times of acting and re-acting O how would our hearts be more broken with shame and sorrow and how would we adore the richnesse of the treasure of mercy which must have a multitude in it to pardon the multitude of our infinite errors and sinnes But this is the comfort though we cannot understand every particular sin or time of sinning yet if we be not idle to search and cast over the books and if we be heartily grieved for those sins which we have found out and can by true repentance turn from them unto God and by faith unto the blood of Jesus Christ I say that God who knowes our sins better then we know them and who understands the true intentions and dispositions of the heart that if it did see the unknown sins it would be answerably carried against them He will for his own mercy sake forgive them and he too will not remember them Nevertheless though David saith who can understand his errors as the Prophet Jeremiah spake also The heart of man is desperately wicked who can know it yet must we bestir our selves at heaven to get more and more heavenly light to finde out more and more of our sinnings So the Lord can search the heart And though we shall never be able to finde out all our sins which we have committed yet it is possible and beneficial for us to finde out yet more sins then yet we do know And you shall find these in your own experience that as soon as ever grace entred your hearts you saw sin in another way then ever you saw it before yea and the more grace hath traversed and increased in the soul the more full discoveries hath it made of sinnes It hath shewn new sins as it were new sins not for their being not as if they were not in the heart and life before but for their evidence and our apprehension and feeling we do now see such wages and such inclinations to be sinful which we did not think to be so before As physick brings those humours which had their Simile residence before now more to the sense of the Patient or as the Sun makes open the motes of dust which were in the roome before so doth the light of the word discover more corruption But I passe by that point of the impossibility of a full apprehension of all sinnes committed ignorantly and inconsiderately I now proceed from Davids complaint to Davids request Davids request and here I shall speak of his first Request viz. Cleanse thou me from secrets or secret sins Saint Austin upon the words Ab occultis meis munda me domine expresseth it thus A cupiditatibus in me latentibus munda noe i. from those concupiscences which lie so hid and so close and so private within me O Lord cleanse thou me And in his second exposition of this Psalm for he expounded the Psalm twise Tolle-ex corde maelam cogitationem i. O Lord take out of my very heart even the sinful thoughts I will name the Proposition and then we may perhaps open things more fully CHAP. I. Doct. IT is the desire of an holy person to be cleansed not only from publick but also from private and secret It is the desire of a holy person to be cleansed from secret faults sinnes Rom. 7. 24. O wretched man saith Paul who shall deliver me Why O blessed Apostle what is it that holds thee what is it that molests thee thy life thou sayest was unblamable before thy conversion and since thy conversion Phil 3. Thou hast exercised thy self to have a conscience void of offence toward God and toward men Acts 24. 16. And yet thou criest out O wretched man and yet thou complainest who shall deliver me Verily brethren it was not sin abroad but at home it was not sin without but at this time sin within it was not Pauls sinning with man but Pauls sinning within Paul O that Law of his members warring secretly within him against the Law of his minde This this made that holy man so to cry out so to complaine As Rebekah was weary of her life not as we read for any forraine disquietments but because of domestique troubles the daughters of Heth within the house made her weary of her life so the private and secret birth of corruption within Paul the workings of that that was the cause of his trouble that was the ground of his exclamation and desires who shall deliver me I remember that the same Paul adviseth the Ephesians as to put of the former Conversation so to put on the renewed spirit of the minde Ephes 4. 22 23. intimating that there are sinnes which are lurking within as well as sins walking without and that true Christians must not only sweep the doore but wash the Chamber my meaning is not onely come off from sins which lie open in the Conversation but also labour to be cleansed from sinnes and sinning which remaine secret and hidden in the Spirit and inward disposition Now for the beneficial discovery of this assertion let us enquire four things 1. In what respects sins are called secret 2. What it is to be cleansed 3. Why we are to desire a cleansing from them 4. What of all this to us SECT I. 1. IN what respect sinnes are called secret for the resolution In what respect sins are called secret of this know that sinne hath a double reference Either to God and so really no sin nor manner of sinning Not to God is secret Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him saith the Lord do not I fill heaven and earth saith the Lord Jer. 23. 24. it is true that wicked men with an Atheistical folly imagine to hide themselves and their sinful wayes from God they seek deep to hide their Councel from the Lord and their works are in the dark and they say who seeth us and who knoweth us Isa 29. 15. But really it is not so though the cloud may somewhat eclipse the light of the Sun and though the dark night may shut it forth altogether yet there stands no cloud nor curtain nor moment of darknesse or secrecy 'twixt the eyes of God and the wayes of man The wayes of a man are before the eyes of the Lord and he pondereth all his goings Prov. 5. 21. He speakes principally there of the wayes of the adulterer which usually are plotted with the most cunning secrecy yet God
Patient perseverance I will hearken saith David Ps 85. 3. Patient perseverance I will wait saith the Church Mica 7. 4. A variety or multiplicity of matter like as a patient who comes to the Physician Sir saith he such an ach in my 4. Variety of matter head and such crudity in my stomack and such a stitch in my side so when we come to the Lord in prayer we may and should open not only one want but all our wants and crave help not in one thing but in every thing we should multiply requests O Lord saith David in Psal 51. I was conceived in sinne but do thou cleanse that and I shed the blood of Uriah do thou pardon that and I defiled his wife do thou wash that and I lost thy spirit for these but do thou restore that and I weakned and wounded my graces but do thou renew them As Paul spake Phil. 4. 6. In every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your request be made known to God so I say for every thing let your manifold requests go up to God by prayer And I think that phrase in Eph. 6. 18. Praying with all prayer will reach the point in hand All prayer extending it self not only to all the kinds and forms of praying but also to all the matters or things for which we do pray Reasons Reasons hereof are these 1. God can heare every request as well as any one A multiplied 1. God hears every Request as well as any one request as well as a single request for he takes not nor observes things by discourse where one notion may be an impediment to the apprehension of another but all things by reason of his omniscence are equally at once present unto him 2. Nay he can grant many and great requests as easily as 2. God can grant many and great Petitions as well as single and little ones the single and smallest Petition The greatest gift comes as freely and readily out of his hand as the most common mercy even Jesus Christ and pardon of many sinnes are of the same price with our daily bread Though the former gifts be in comparison with the other of a much more elevated nature and dignity yet in respect of the fountaine of them all of them come from the freenesse of his goodness and love 3. Christ by whom we are to put up all our requests for he 3. Christ is as able to implead many and great Requests as few and small is our advocate and intercessor is as ready and able to implead many and great requests as well as some and inferior As he is our mighty Redeemer so he is our mighty Intercessor And his blood is as efficacious and meritorious for many sins as for some 4. God hath for this end made manifold promises therefore 4 God hath made manifold Promises we may put up many and great requests at once the promises are called the wells of salvation and the breasts of consolation Now the living wells will afford a plenty as well as a scanting measure of water the child may move from breast to breast and draw enough of either if one alone will not serve If one promise comprehends not all thy wants yet all of them do And as God graciously comprehends all our supplies in all of his promises so he hath propounded them all unto us that we might then there urge him for the supply of all our necessities 5. Lastly God is rich in mercy and plenteous in compassion 5. God is rich in Mercy his mercies are often stiled manifold mercies and his goodness is called an abundant goodnesse and his redemption a plenteous redemption and his kindness a great kindnesse Now mercy is a ready inclination to pity and help and multitudes of mercies are as a compounded and doubled and redoubled opening as it were of Gods tenderness to do a sinner good Uses of this might be many I will briefly touch a few Then conceale no one of thy distresses from God the heart and Conceale no one of thy distresses from God life of man are full of sinne and as full of want there is not any branch of the soul nor limb of the body nor turning of the life but is replenished with some necessity or other Thou hast a minde which yet needs to be in●ightned a judgement which yet needs to be captivated an heart which yet needs to be converted and humbled how many sinful commissions are there which need to be bewailed how many particular and vile inclinations which need yet to be subdued besides all this every grace which thou hast and there are manifold graces in an holy soul every one of them is in exigence and needs a more spiritual filling both for the habit and acts and degrees Yea and all our duties are but lame handed motions which needs more strengthning or as mixt rivers which should runne more clearly In this case what should we do to whom should we go should we divide the principles of our helps and go for some to God and for the most to the creatures O in no wise for all our help is only in him who alone can help all or should we branch out our helps and present them as a beggar doth his supplies one day open one want and some distance of time hereafter open another O no come with all and with all at once to God who is as able and as willing for many sinners as well as for one sinner and for many sinnes in one man as well as for one in any As they did with the impotent and sick man they b●ought all of him bed and all and laid him before Christ so should we bring body and soul and every distresse of either and present the whole bulk root and branches all before the Lord at once for a manifold supply we should presse upon him for manifold mercies for abundant strength for God is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we are able to ask or think Eph. 3. Beloved as a mans own unworthinesse should not prejudice him from being a Petitioner to the Throne of grace so the variety of a mans necessities should not discourage him to commense his suits at the Throne of rich mercies forasmuch as there is reason in God which will dis-hearten us and there is reason in our selves to crave as earnestly and as simmultaniously for all our helps as for some thou doest equally need the pardon of this sin as that and Mercy is as ready and able for both as for either And if that corruption were more subdued and yet this remained altogether untouched thou wouldst have as many and more forcible suspitions of the truth of thy estate from this division and inequallity of thy victory Wherefore as Abraham in his suit for those of Sodom and Gommorrah took up request upon request descending from high to low from many to few so should we in our
requests ascend from one sin to more from more to many from many to all you know that confession of sins should not be particular only but universal and our sorrow for sin should respect the kinds as well as the particular acts all which import an Amplitude of grants so much Mercy and supply answerable to the required latitude of confessions and sorrow Object Object 'T is true some one sin may upon special reason either of some guilt or present insolency be more insisted on then another as one clause in the plea may be more urged then any other yet not with the exception of the rest Sol. O that sin Lord by which I have dishonoured thee so much and yet which rageth so much pardon it subdue it out with it and not that only but such sins and not them only but all my sins blot them out cleanse me from them Another Proposition which I will briefly touch on shall be this viz. SECT II. Doct. 2 THat even a good Christian should have a fear of great sins A good Christian should fear g●eat ●●ns as well as less Reasons from The latitude of original sin as well as a care of secret sins Keep me also from presumptuous sins Reasons whereof may be these The latitude of original sin which as it is yet remaining in the best so it i● in them an universal fountain naturally apt to any vile inclination though actual sins may be divided in the life yet they are all united in their spring i they are all of them virtually as so many potential effects involved and lurking in original sin as their cause which how far it may work both from its own strength and the assistance of temptions and occasions if God doth not actually prevent and interpose if we put not forth our fear and watch we may with miserable experience both know and bewail 2. The instances of great transgressions even those Saints 2. The best Saints have been guilty of great Transgressions who have been as the highest stars have left behind them their twinklings and sad Eclipses Noah his actual distempers by wine Lot his unnatural defilements by incest David his wounds and bleeding by whoredom and blood Peter his unkind and troubled denial of Christ against his knowledge Now when Cedars fall should not the tender plants tremble if the sins of others be not our fear they may be our practise what the best have done the weakest may imitate if they do not hear and fear there being scarce any notorious sin into which self-confidence will not plunge us and from which an holy and watchfull fear may not happily preserve us Vse An Instruction from this and so on Blessed is the man that Blessed is he that feareth alwayes feareth alwayes Prov. 28. 14. When we read of great sinners in the Scripture and see great falls and sins in others as we should thereupon seek to recover them who are thus fallen by our Counsel and prayers so we that stand should take heed lest we also fall 1 Cor. 10. 12. If that Satan who would deal with us could be procured to shape out only mean and vulgar assaults and suggestions to common and unavoidable infirmities and sinnings this might somewhat abate the vigour and intension of our holy fear and circumspection yet not altogether forasmuch as he being a subtile enemy trains and facilitates the heart by the frequency of small commissions at length to the boldness of great Impieties or if Satans suggestions were artificially and extreamly laid and pressing to great sins as well as small yet if we had natures no way capable to receive the greatest impressions of sin but were naturally averse and stifly indisposed to such temptations then our carefull fear were not so requisite But we are not shot-proof Temptations even to the greatest sinnes have within our breast some principles which would presently shake hands with them The actual light and acting grace do sometimes happily turn them aside from closing though they keep them at the door as the Prophet caused the Messengers who came from the King to take away his life Yet there is another Principle of corruption which would let them in and which would co-operate with those temptations even to Contemplation and inclination and acting both inward and outward nay this corrupt nature of ours alone though it doth learn somewhat by temptations and occasions yet it alone from it self can cast forth most sore temptations to most abhorred sinnings Therefore this we must do fore-past sins must be eyed with grief present inclinations with combat and future with fear we must not in our War imitate the Syrians who were to fight neither with small nor great but with the King of Israel No but we must oppose all sins small sins as well as great and great as well as small those sins which do encounter us we should force some out and keep the rest off He is a wise and sincere Christian who resists the smallest and fears the greatest sins Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins SECT III. Doct. 3 ANother Proposition which I might observe from the words absolutely considered is this That a good man A good man is Gods servant is Gods s●rvant Thy servant from c. We read of divers servants in the Scriptures some are the servants of men who apply all their gifts and parts and sacrifice the whole method of their beings and expressings to claw and humour the itch and pleasure of others All flatterers are such who are a people of slavish-bondage having sold themselves from themselves to some persons Some are the servants of the world whose hearts and labors are bestowed upon earthly things and they make even those noble souls of theirs to weary themselves for very vanity and to increase only in that with the least toe is too excellent to tread upon Some are the Servants of Satan mentioned in an instrumental Activity and readiness to entertain and execute his base and hellish inspirations and motions Some are the servants of sin who quales quanti all that they are and can do is to fulfill the lusts of their flesh there is no servant so obedientially attending the Command of his Lord as they to receive and act the pleasure of their sinfull hearts Some are servants to themselves who as if they were born neither for God nor man apply all their will and strength and abilities only to their own ends without any real effectual consideration to publique good of Church or Country And some are servants to God Moses was so Simeon was so Moses my servant is deal said God Now letest thou thy servant depart in peace said Simeon and David here Keep back thy servant Gods servants disters from all servants in the world every other servant looseth himself by service Note he is not sui juris in the Law but the only way to find a mans self is to be Gods servant Every
other servant looseth his liberty by his service but libertty is then got when we become servants to God As soon as we enter the service we obtain our freedom Every other servant in strictness of Rule is below a son a child but every servant of God is a son of God and shall have not gifts as a meer servant may have but the inheritance which the son who serveth his Father shall have There are two sorts of servants under God 1. Some stubborn who are Servi victi as St. Aust in speaks The Law of Creation is upon them and so will they nill they they are in some obediential and serviceable Relation 2. Others are servants not of force but of affection not of compulsion but of election they have chosen God to be their Lord and have willinglly resigned up themselves in the purpose of their hearts to an universal observance and love of him and obedience unto him impartially and constantly to do his work Such a servant to God was David but this observation is very general therefore I pass unto another viz. SECT IV. Doct. 4 EVen this That we are Gods servants should be used to move the Lord to help us against sins you know that in all relations That we are Gods servants should be a plea for help against sinnes there are mutual bonds and duties the wife owes much of subjection to the husband and the husband owes also much of love respect and care to the wife The Child owes much attendance reverence and affectionate duty to the Parents and the Parents owe much of instruction reproof correction nurture provision of Estate for the child again so is it betwixt the Lord and his servant though to a mear slave there be no mutual obligation or else it is in that which is weak yet to a servant who stands in that relation which they call Ingenuous as much is due from him to his Lord so something his Lord ought to do for him to feed him to cloth him to house and lodge him to defend him against wrong and injuries This is it in the case of David Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins as if he had said O God thou art my Lord I have chosen thee to whom I will give obedience thou art he whom I will follow I bestow all that I am on thee Now a Lord will help his servant his servant against an enemy against an enemy who for the Lords service is the servants enemy O my Lord help me I am not able by my own strength to uphold my self but thou art All-sufficiency Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins Note I observe in Scripture many singular Methods to prevail in request upon God sometimes he hath been urged from something in himself to do things for his Mercies sake and for his truth sake and for his goodness sake and for his holiness sake sometimes he hath been urged from something which he was very tender of and at which he aims in all his dealings viz. for his own glory and for his names sake sometimes he hath been urged from some word or other which he hath let fall at which the believing soul doth catch as did Benhadab servants from Ahab thy brother Benhadab Remember thy word saith David upon which thou hast caused me to hope Psalm 119. Thou saidst thou wouldst do me good said Jacob Gen. 32. Sometimes he hath been urged from the special relations twixt him and his people as from that of a Father Isa 64. 8. But now O Lord thou art our Father and this of a Lord. Isa 63. 18. The people of thy holiness have possessed it but a little while verse 19. We are thine and in many other places Remember thy servant and remember thy servants Beloved It is a great thing to stand in near relations to God and then it is a good thing to plead by them with God forasmuch as nearer relations have strongest force with all the servant can do more then a stranger and the Child then a servant and the wife then a Child but though this urging of God by vertue of our relation be an excellent point yet because it is not the main intention of the place I likewise pass it over Another observable Proposition may be this SECT V. Doct. 5 THat our special Relations to God should be special Reasons to work a care not to sin against God Keep thy servant Our special relation to God should make us carefull not to sin against God from c. Thy servant there be many reasons against sinning the very nature of sin carries along with it a condemnation of sinning because sin formerly is a transgression an Anomy and a Rebellion which alone is an inglorious thing Again The Laws and threatnings of God should be as forcible cords to draw off the heart from sin And again All the Mercies and goodness of God should exasperate the heart against sin Again All the Attributes of God might hold us Now with these this also may come in viz. The specialty of our Relation to God that we are his Children and he is our Father we are his servants and he is our Lord though the common obligations are many and sufficienr yet the special Relations are also a further tie the more near a person comes to God the more carefull he should be not to sin against God Let us who are of the day be sober let us not sleep as do others 1 Thes 5. 6 8. God hath not called us unto uncleanness but unto holiness 2 Thes 3. 7. If you call him father pass the time of your so journing here in fear 1 Pet. 1. 17. If I then be a father where is my honor If I be a Master where is my fear Mal. 1. 6. I will be sanctified saith God of all them that draw near unto me There is a double drawing near unto God 1. One in respect of Office as the Priests of whom he there spake who because their Calling and Office is more high and heavenly they therefore should be more religious and holy 2. Another in respect of Nature and change by vertue of which our Relation comes closer to God even this nearness should occasion more care against sinfulness Reasons Reasons whereof are these First Admissions of sinnings here do diffuse a greater ingloriousness Their sinnings are most dishonourable to God to God sin is most darkning in a white cloud then in a black as a spot is more eminently disgracefull in a fair then in a foul cloth Though the sins of evil men do prejudice Gods Glory yet the great sinnings of good men do occasion much more for not only the particular sinnings send up a cloud but other men by reason of them form out of them a smoak of blaspheming and reproaching of the wayes of God and the profession of Grace Secondly Their great sinnings do make them the sorer wounds Their sinnings make the greater wounds and
soul doth as it were shut its eyes and stop its ears it doth break away to the sin against all the discoveries and clear impleadings of knowledg gainsaying and withstanding it the presumptuous person goes not to sin ignorantly but he doth it by imprinted light so the sin as Gods enemy which yet he will embrace as his friend yea the more Inexcusable that a sin is the worse it is when little or nothing can be said in behalf of the siner thus is it in presumptuous sinings the man cannot say I did not know it I was not warned 2. The more pride of heart accompanies any kind of sinning The more pride of heart in any sinning the viler it is this makes it the more vile for pride lifts up the point of the sword it shakes the speare against God when the will of God and the will of a sinner come into a competition about sining then pride growes high Who is the Lord saith Pharaoh that I should let Israel goe Exod. 3. Who is Lord over us said they in Psalme 12. when the heart goes proudly to sin it will acknowledge noe Lord but it s own pleasure and no rule but it s own resolution it can slight a precept and scorne a threatning Now presumptuous sinnings are filled with pride I think St. Austine had an aime at this in his exposition of this v. when he rendered the reading of it thus contine servum tuum a superbiis keep back thy servant from prides as if pride were knotted and folded doubled in presumptuous sinnings there was pride and pride again in that heart which durst thus to sinne and verily so there is in presumptuous sinnings a manifold pride a pride of judgement to approve that which God hath branded and condemned a pride of will to rise up to that which God would have the sinner forbear A pride of security to make a Sanctuary for the soul when God hath threatned wrath c. 3. The more impudency and boldnesse attends a sinning the worse it is There is a double impudency about sinning One of defence when the sinne hath been committed of which I am not now to speak which is no more but to paint The more impudency in sinning the worse it is a whore or to cover a plain sore to make that seeme good which really is stark nau●ht Another of entrance when the sinful soul layes aside all shame and fear and modesty and restraints and arguments said he whatsoever may be said come of it whatsoever may come yet I wi●l on let God take it well or take it ill let him beseech by mercy or warne by threatnings nothing moves neither my peace nor comfort nor soul prevail nor my shame nor trouble nor misery keep back But thus it is in presumptuous sinnings the heart is bold and impudent which can look so much mercy in the face and yet will dare to sinne which can look so many threatnings in the face yet wil dare to sin which can look its own great misery in respect of the issue Note and end of the sinnin in the face and yet will dare to sinne nay which can perhaps look many former experiences of bitte●ness and anguish for the same sinful adventurings in the face and yet will dare to sin puttin● the hand into the fire ag●in which hath burned it and venturnig to swim in those waters where had not Gods mercy stept in the soul had long since been drowned 4. The more abuse of mercy concurs to the sinning the more hainous it raiseth the sinne for mercy is the sweetest stop of a The more Mercy is abused the more hainous the sin sinner and the kindness of it should smooth off the soule from offending what is mercy but that unspeakable readinesse in God to forgive a sinner a gracious willingnesse to sit down with wrong offered if yet the sinner will come in and the abusings of it are affronts to the highest love But now in presumptuous sinnings mercy is extreamly abused First in that it hath not its dir●ct end the direct end of mercy is to awe and to keep off the heart from sinne There is mercy with thee therefore shalt thou be feare Psal 130. But the presumptuous sinner is lesse fearful because God is so merciful and the mercies of God should lead to repentance Rom. 2. But the presumptuous sinner yet dares to hold on the sinful trade Secondly when it is made to serve and to encourage sinne O this is the imbasing of that high and tender attribute of God when we draw out from his goodnesse to embolden the heart to wickednesse as if that God whose soul abhorres sinne would let fall any expression to hearten a sinner yet thus it is with the presuming sinner the very mercy of God makes him bold to sin against God the confidence of that easiness in God to forgive occasions him therefore to adventure and multiply transgressions In respect of others 3. In respect of others David had good reasons to pray to be kept from presumptuous sinnes in respect of others as well as in respect of himself whither you consider his general calling a man of goodness or his particular calling a man of dignity and place but I will fold them both together thus then 2. Reasons His sins would be exemplary 1. Such sinnes would be exemplary and noted There are three things which set a man upon the stage which lift up his actions on high to the eye of the word One is his powerful and active sanctity a very holy man is a kinde of a wondrous sight after which many eyes are gazing Godlinesse is a very rare thing and therefore men look much upon him who professeth it Another is his singular dignity lift a man out of the croud advance him to a place and seat of honour above others how busie is the multitude to eye and judge and imitate him The wayes and actions of great persons are usually the present copies of the most A third is his notorious miscarriages which are like the tayle of a blazing comet the great sinning of good orgreat men fall instantly into common discourse and perhaps also easily into common practice Therefore great cause had David to pray against presumptuous sinnes which by his practice might prove a common snare for who will not confidently write after that sinful copy which both goodnesse and greatnesse have begun that which the great man dot● the inferior person will do and that which the good man doth that the evil man thinks he may now lawfully do if knowledge will venture ignorance supposeth that it may safely follow and if holinesse will adventure why should profaneness be so nice as to stop The way or fact is credited either as not bad or else not so dangerous where either authority or profession are leaders Now this might be some cause to move good David to pray to be kept back from presumptuous sins
knowing how his actions were capital copies wrote in Text Letters And that the sinnings of great men are like the fallings of Cedars which bring downe with them to the ground many lower shrubs And that the sinnings of good men are easily snares whereby other men would encourage and deceive themselves 2. Such sinnings from him would be trophies to evil men His sins would be trophies to evil men There are three things which flash evil hearts One is the accomplishing of their own projects and lusts Another is the distresses of the Church Aha so would we have it A third is the great falls of good men now like the dog they will bark and insult over the wounded Lion A good mans sins which are his wound and Gods dishonour is their day of mirth and sport I observe that there are three mouths which the higher sinnings of good men do open The mouth of God O how his word thunders his displeasure against the soul of such an one who is come so neere unto him and yet hath adventured thus to sin against him doest thou thus requite the Lord. The mouth of conscience if we do well and keep uprightly with God then the mouth of conscience yeelds words of oyle and peace it exceedingly excuseth comforteth acquitteth upholdeth c. but if we wickedly transgress and exceed infirmities O then the mouth of conscience proves like the mouth of the sword it speaks with sharpnesse and woundings ●nd terrible amazement c. breaks the bones of David Psal 51. makes him roar Psal 32. The mouth of evil men Now their voice is set on high the trumpet is set to their mouth O what Ragings Raylings Girdings Scoffings Obloquies and Blasphemies are instantly heaped upon Religion and Profession yea these are they this is their holiness this their profession this their niceness this the hypocrisie of them all Now perhaps this also might move David to pray to be kept back from presumptuous sins though not the immediate yet the colateral reason viz. because he might not give occasion to the Adversary that God might not suffer by him nor Religion by him that he might not sad the hearts of the righteous nor weaken the Glory of holiness nor stretch the mouths of them who can bless themselves in a course of vileness and yet curse and accuse the godly for particular facts only In respect of God 4. In respect of God Here also might David frame strong and singular reasons to be kept back from presumptuous sins I know there is nothing in God which a good heart might not urge as a sufficient 2. Reasons argument against any sin but I will contract my thoughts and matter 1. What God had been to him might cause him to pray What God hath been to him against presumptuous sins For his temporal kindness that was exceeding great he raised him from the crook to the Scepter from the Shepherds tent to the Kings Throne and now after all this to answer so great goodness with great sinfulness this would be a high degree of odious unthankfulness His spiritual kindness that was more then the former he did set his love upon him and made him a person after his own heart gave unto him his good Spirit of grace and joy comforted his soul in many adversities compassed him about with favour as with a shield heard his prayers granted him the desires of his soul O then how should David do such great wickedness and sin against his God! God forbid that David should put forth an hand to such an high kind of sinning who had received from the hand of his God such high kinds of mercy and goodness Mercy should make the greatest distance twixt us and sin and cause the purer walking twixt us and God What he was to God 2. What he was to God Why David was his servant see the Text and presumptuous sinnings are high oppositions to our service of God David was his child his son and presumptuous sinnings are great at least incongruities to the way of filial obedience Should such a man as I flee said Nehemiah so here should such a man as David one to whom God was so near one who was so near to God should he break out into the ways of Rebellions into the acts of an enemy into the paths of hostility not only sin which may befall the best but sin presumptuously which befals the worst nor only to be surprised by temptation but also to dare one in a sin by a proud presumption What for a child to take arms against his Father for a holy David to sin with so high a hand against so good a God and so professed a Father no marvel that he fears and prayes and that earnestly Lord Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins No other might be expected from men professing themselves haters of God and Lover of sin but for a friend for a servant for a child how can my God take such vile dishonors from me and who will honour him if his own should adventure and presume thus to dis-glory his name and wrong his and their relation SECT IV. NOW I shall descend to the usefull Applications of this Vse 1 point unto our selves there are four general uses which may flow from this prayer of David 1. Of Instruction 2. Of Examination 3. Of Exhortation 4. Direction 1. For Instruction It may instruct and inform us in divers particulars viz. Instruction 1. To see our own danger as the prayers of holy men for good things should learn us faith and hope so their prayers See our own danger against great sins should teach us fear and watchfulness There is a story of an heathen man who prayed to Jupiter to be saved from his enemies one who heard him so petitioning willed him to mend his suit and to desire Jupiter to save him from his friend for he trusted them more and therefore they might do him most hurt I would add one thing more to have mended that petition also He should have prayed to have been saved from himself for there is more danger in our selves then in all enemies or friends O Brethren we carry about with us vile natures and treacherous hearts Even those abominations which sometimes we could have trembled at unto them will our wicked selves deliver our selves if God keep us not back Natural corruptions will bid fair fo● the foulest commissions and that the match is not finished and acted it is not because we want hearts but because God restrains and hinders My soul is even among Lyons said David In another case assuredly our soul dwels with such a nature as will not distinguish twixt small and great but is then most like it self when it is boyling in the vilest degrees of sinning The temptations cannot be so black and foul but our corrupt hearts would easily kindle by them and we should embrace them unless there were a God to stay and stop us
that When the soul suppresseth When the soul suppresseth truth truth and holds back the light for unrighteousness sake when it knows the fact or way to be sinfull and yet will not be held back 4. What is it for a person to bless himself in his way and to When a man blesseth himself in a sinfull way protect himself when God hath cursed his facts to say none of this evil shall befall me but to morrow shall be as to day The Prophet is a fool and the spiritual man is mad God will not do as he reports therefore soul take thine ease thy course let us eat and drink and to our sins still 5. What is that When men will not repent till they be old When men wil not repent till they be old or ready to die and till then will continue upon that score of sinning upon a presumption that sin will be easily discharged and Mercy presently had When men return to those sins they have found bitter 6. What is that Returning of the soul to a fact or way which it hath found to be bitter already and though it hath found Hell in the conscience for the same sinning yet it will break out again upon a hope of great mercy Object Yea But alas The best have their infirmities and escapes we think no hurt and God knows our hearts sin we do and who doth not but it is not through presumption but through infirmity The spirit is ready but the flesh is weak we still carry flesh and blood about us it is our weakness and God we trust is mercifull Sol. It is most true that the best are sick and the strongest are weak but then it is as true that the heart is deceitfull and sin is subtile and men are apt to raise themselves in a false opinion of their safeties and to extenuate the height and parts of their sinning But to the objection I will briefly discover unto you whether Four things Whether our sinnings be from infirmity or presumption your sinnings fall from Infirmity or else proceed from Presumption This must be granted in the general 1. There are sins of Infirmity as well as of Presumption 2. Infirmities are of two sorts 1. Meer Infirmities sins arising from meer weakness without any deliberation of the mind or choice of the Will as suddain evil thoughts words deeds dulnesses defects shortness in good c. 2. Mixt which have a tange of presumption but not enough to make the sin to be presumptuous A knowledge but not a practical Judgement pro hic nunc some apprehension but not a perfect deliberation suddain passions perplexing the Judgement and dazling of it Inadvertencies Inconsiderations But more particularly 1. Acts owning themselves to infirmitie depend most Infirmities depend most upon outward strength upon outward strength they have not such an entire causality from the subject but are produced from unequal power It is granted that even a good heart may yet be found in the dirt it may be overtaken with some particular facts which are stark naught but this irregular action ariseth principally from a strength of temptation which exceeds the actual strength of the renewed heart like a man in a crowd though he strives another way yet is over-born he is over-set he is carried down for all his strength cannot shoulder off the crowd he is too weak So when a man sins through infirmity there is a nature which resists as Paul had a Law in his mind warring against the Law of his members Rom. 7. yet the strength of that sinfull Law did over-bear the resisting strength of his renewed mind in respect of particular facts therefore the acts were acts of infirmity But what is this to him whose heart is set on wickedness who imagineth sinfull devices who shapes and contrives his way of sinning who tempts even sin it self to sin whose sinnings arise from affection not from temptation who provokes his corruption to get out who is a devil to his own heart inclining and stirring it to sinfull commissions were our sinnings springing from a full principle from a nature giving out it self and that alone I cannot judge them to be infirmities 2. Acts of infirmity are not habitual but particular they Infirmities are not habitual but particular are rather transient then permanent acts they are acts but not continued acts like a land-flood not like a river and the reasons of it are these 1. Partly because they spring from Temptation which though Note it may now and then over-reach the soul yet the renewed heart observing the slight of Satan and the imbecillity of it self provides therefore for stronger defence and strength to resist And 2. Partly because They flow from passion and sudden distemper which is not a constant inclination but only a fit a present violence David in a sudden Passion will kill Nabal and every mothers child but when Ab●gail met and asswaged him and made him understand reason he was quit from his projects But now where things fall into a habit into a course into a common practise when a man is every day at his sin when it proves an haunt this cannot be called a business of infirmity when our actions run and fall into a kind of naturalness and custom that a man is always sliping and alwayes swearing and alwayes filching and alwayes lying when the way of his sin is a Trade why this is no more to be reputed an infirmity then for a Mariner to be in his ship or a Trades-man to be in his shop Thirdly acts of infirmity are involuntary acts the man doth Infirmities are involuntary acts them but the will is against them the evil which I would not do that do I said Paul in Rom. 7. As the fact opposeth the Law so that will opposeth the fact it is that which a mans judgment disapproves and which his will is averse from The traveller his will is to go the right way and in that to stand yet he may stumble and fall down and this may be called an infirmity But if he be himself and should put off his cloaths and lay himself down in the dirt this were an act of a voluntary madnesse so when a man sets himself to sin when he will go and wallow in the mire when with Ahab he sells himself to work wickednesse that he doth bargaine away his soul for a sin when he gives up himself to uncleanness with greediness this is no infirmity it is a height of proud presumption But through infirmity of prevalent resistance a good man may be sold under sin as Paul he may be led captive being over-surprized he may be led with Peter that way or to that fact which yet he would not willingly do Fourthly acts of infirmity is not a state of quietnesse or consistence i. if a man sins from a weaknesse of withstanding Infirmities are not a state of quietnesse grace Though the
Thus the presumptuous sinner Note makes way to the despairing sinner for what is it which causeth despaire when the soul sees justice to be exceeding great and a cloud over the mercy-seat now it sinks a pace and what darkens the mercy-seat more then the greatnesse of sinning and why doth divine justice seem so terrible but because the person hath been so audaciously sinful Now he saith with Cain my iniquity is greater then can be forgiven Gen. 4. No no there is not balm for such wounds there is not mercy for such great transgressions as I stand guilty of SECT VII 4. Of Direction THe last Use of the point shall be for direction guiding us Direction Nine Rules How to be kept from presumptuous sins Beware of a course of little sins to the observation of some particular Rules that so we may be kept from presumptuous sinnings 1. Beware of a course of little sins The stirrop though it be low and small yet it doth serve a man to mount the great flames of fire took their beginning from a cole or a spark And men usually have been first wading in lesser sins who are now swimming in great transgressions sinnings supposed as little or inconsiderable have not only this happinesse that they are not so much regarded but this unhappiness that they are more often committed And then this is certain That the frequent commission of small sins is great in it self and doth also dispose and prepare to greater commissions many drops make a currant he who makes no conscience of acting many little sins will shortly take the boldness to assay and act some great sin For 1. The more any sin is committed the more is the Note judgement blinded and corrupted 2. The more are the affections inclined and seduced 3. The more is conscience benumbed and seared 4. The lesser force have divine arguments with the soul being surfeited with the pleasures of former sinnes and then it must well follow that the heart being thus qualified may easily be wrought upon to a foul commission this I finde that the way to be kept from an high sin is to fear the least sin For little sinnings are not like a little inch of candle which goes off in an absolute period but they are like a traine of powder which takes fire from corn to corne till at length the barrel is burst asunder or like a little sicknesse which is an humour disposing to a stronger distemper or like a little circle in a pond which begets greater and greater I observe three things 1. That Satan hath a strange hand over that soul which can Satan hath a strong hand over the soul which can bear with any sin bear with any sin he may by lesser things maintain his command as it was said that the little childe did command the land for the childe prevailed with the Queen and the Queen with the King and he over the land Satan can prevail for a little sin and a little sin can prevail with the heart and the heart with the whole man 2. That little sinnes are breeding sinnes Now sinne will keep its bounds but naturally would greaten it self though Little sins are breeding sins it seeme modest at first yet will it by degrees become familiar and impudent 3. They are entisings sinnes they are the advocates in the They are inticing sins bosome for greater they do not onely labour for their own lodging but will deale strongly with the heart to embrace greater as occasion and temptations present themselves Therefore this do give the water leave no not a little little streames makes way to the ocean And thou studiest the present way to become a great transgressor to rise to presumptuous sinnings who wilt allow thy selfe to be an habitually immoderate sinner Secondly take heed of the iterations of any sinne viz. do not go a sinne over and over of all transgressions Take heed of the Iterations of any sin which dispose the soule towards presumption the repeated have a special influence and I will give you a reason for it Because presumptuous sinnings depend much upon the boldness of the heart when the heart becomes bold and fearlesse Note it will then venture thorough thick and thin it will presume far they were men who sinned with both hands and as high as Sodom who came to this passe that they knew no shame Now sinnes of iteration or repeated sinnes they frame a boldnesse in the heart as repeated blows do the anvile and the more hardened the heart is the more bold it growes partly because they delude the heart they work false principles in the minde forasmuch as we have gone on in these courses again and againe and no evil befals us therefore to morrow shall be as to day let us eat and drink and sinne It was a sweet advise that of Elihu Job 34. 32. That which I see not teach thou me if I have done iniquity I will do no more for all sinne grows strong by practise and the often going over it is like the motion of the feet from one round of the ladder to the other still rising or like the manifold turnings of the wheel which mounts the weight still to an higher pitch what Job therefore spake in another case Once have I spoken but I will not answer yea twice but I will proceed no further Job 40. 5. that I say unto thee once thou hast sinned thus and thus yea twise and yet conscience is tender there is yet fear and sorrow but proceed no further least that become mighty to sinne This is certaine that the stronger sin grows the more easily will a sinner presume Now repeated sinnings do wedge in the sin with strength as the more often the Schollar writes after the copy the fairer he writes and the more he is enabled to write so often sinnings makes the soul more strong in that kind and then more fit for a worser Thirdly do not stifle or reject the frequent checks of conscience Do not stifle the frequent checks of conscience God hath appointed several things to give the sinner a touch like cords to twine him in to keep him from sinnings viz. the voice of the word and the voice of judgement and the voice of men and the voice of his own conscience Now mark it there are two of these voices more especially which if a man will neglect and slight a thousand to one but he will fall to be a presumptuous sinner viz. 1. The voice of the Word Prov. 29. 1. He that being often reproved hardened his neck shall suddenly be destroyed and that without remedy 2. The voice of conscience when the conscience shall concurre with the word in its informing acts and in its directing acts and in its warning acts and in its restrictive acts and in its corrective and judicial acts i. it shall point the way or fact in the evil and unlawful quality of it and strive and reason
and fret and reprove and threaten yea and speak bitterly yet a man will go on I say this man hastens to some great sin to presumptuous sinnings I will give you a reason for it because the Lord will forsake this man he will leave him to himself he will give him up to his own heart since he will not hearken to the counsel of the word nor to the advises of his conscience God will strive with him no more but he shall be left to himself this is the usual course of Gods righteous and judicial proceeding Now what can the heart do being left to it selfe as it hath no strength against a great temptation so it hath sufficient strength and desire to for the greatest methods of transgressings if restriction be a merciful bond to corruption then wrathful desertion a desertion of the creature i. a denial of preventing assistance against temptation or inclination or acting why it is as the unmuzling of the Mastive or untying of the Lion Not that God sets on the heart to sinne but that the heart will in a moment be mighty in sinning which is judicially deserted or left by God for former sinnings Therefore I beseech you take heed of scorning divine admonitions and reproofs Consider that place well in Psal 81. 11. But my people would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of me ver 12. so I gave them up to their own hearts lust and they walked in their own counsels if thy heart can rise above the word it will rise above thy conscience and if thy heart rise above thy conscience thy next sinnings will rise above thy former he will not be modest to sinne who growes impudent against the word and violent against his conscience Fourthly secure not the heart because of Gods present silence Be not secure because of Gods present silence Beloved I observe that God is silent oft-times when men are in either way in the good and in the bad a man Note may repeat his seekings of God and yet God may be silent O my God saith David Psal 22. 2. I cry in the day time but thou heardest not and in the night season and a man may repeat his sinnings against God and yet God may be silent Psal 50. 21. These things hast thou done and I kept silence But then this silence is not an infallible testimony either way though he be silent to the many prayers of his servants yet the vision will speak at length for as thou hast a time to seek so God will finde a time to answer And though he be silent many times at the sinnings of men yet this is but forbearance it is not an acquittance if thou takes the times to sinne God will take his turn to punish Psal 50. 21. These things hast thou done and I kept silence thou thoughtest that I was altogether such a one as thy self but I will reprove thee and set them in order before thine eyes Obj. But you will say what is this to the preventing of presumptuous sinnings Sol. Very much for presumptuous sinnings depend much upon security a man secures his facts and wayes from this that God is silent and does not presently draw the sword send for the arrest and therefore presumes to a second or greater sinning from God connivence and patience toward former Solomon insinuates it clearly Eccles 8. 11. Because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily therefore the heart of the sonnes of men is fully set in them to do evil q. d. There is now no ho they make no bones of it they will venture yet again But brethren take heed if you sin and yet you prosper in the world if you sin and yet conscience be quiet if you sinne and yet God presents not a present testimony of his displeasure yet do not presume for if you do evil sinne lies at the doore first or last when you open it your sins shall flie in your face though the punishment of the sinner be not present yet it is certaine it shall not be well with the wiced though he prolong his dayes Eccless 8. 13. yea the sinner of an hundred years old shall be accursed And this is observable that Gods silence towards a forward transgressor is made up at length not only with certainty but with number and measure perhaps he will take such a time to account with thee for thy sinnings that he will break thee suddenly all to pieces he will break thy estate and thy conscience and thy body and thy soul and all and all irrecoverably for ever When a man emboldens his heart to sin because of divine Note patience God doth usually do two things viz. Study and improve Mercy aright 1. He riseth suddenly to the ven eance 2. He curseth the sinner without all remedy and so fully vindicates his silence and glorifies his Justice Fifthly If you would be kept from presumptuous sinnings then both study and improve mercy aright Mercy it is the sweet savour of a sinfull soul that gentle voice which speaks hope to a trembling spirit that tender hand which supports and relieves a fainting soul And yet even from this sweet flower doth p●esumption suck the vilest poyson corrupting and inflaming the heart to the greater boldness of sinf●ll adventures from the greater goodness of exceeding Mercifulness in God But then mark it that upright apprehension of divine Mercy would serve to keep off the soul from presumptuous sinnings If a man did consider two things 1. That Mercy the very intent of it the pulse of it it is to draw a man off from sin it is true Mercy is an harbor but not for the Traitor to thrust in his ship it is a City of refuge but not for the audacions man-slayer O! No Mercy it is the tenderest goodness but withal it is a special goodness and is set up not as a light by the sea that a man may know thereby how to sail more freely that a man should therefore sin more violently but as a proclamation from a Prince to draw in the rebel to sheath his sword and to fall down on his knees There is Mercy with thee therefore shalt thou be feared said David And knowest thou not O man saith the Apostle that the goodness of God should lead thee to Repentance Rom. 2. 4. Hath God mercy to pardon me with what heart can I then presume to provoke him Hath he Mercy to pardon me How canst thou then O my soul hold on thy sins not return when Mercy sends a Message after thee it is the last and most prevailing motive for a sinner to repent even this that God will be mercifull to him 2. Mercy mis-proved to the sin is both justly denied to the sinner and also intends his sin The only way to forsake our Mercies is that we will not forsake our sins God will never shew thee Mercy if tbou wilt not return from sinning against him
if we will not return iniquity shall be our ruine Object O! but God is mercifull though we be sinfull Sol. Yea But he is mercifull only to the penitent and if thou wilt be impenitent thou forsakest thy metcies and treasurest wrath unto thy self against the day of wrath Rom. 2. 4 5. Nay more Mercy doth so infinitely upbraid thee that the very Devils will hiss at thee in the day of Judgement they may cry out against thee for the abominablest wretch living yea in this respec● worse then they Lord may they say we have sinned exceedingly against thee why what should we do we had never any hope or proposition of mercy it was never offered to us nor assured us but here 's a wretch that though he were a sinner yet thou didst beseech him by thy mercies to leave his sins thou assuredst him of free pardon if he would return and he not only refused the pardon but because of thy goodness in it therefore grew more proudly bold and presuming to sin against thee 6. Sixthly Consider this That it is a difficult thing to repent It is a difficult thing to repent and that the more a man doth sin the more hard it is to repent of his sins Object Why will you say what of this to the prevention of presumptuous sinnings Sol. I answer this conduceth much because the presuming sinner leads on his soul to sin upon this ground and confidence that if the worst come to the worst he will yet at last put off his sins and repent whereupon his heart adventures far Now if a man were throughly convinced of two things this ground would sink and perhaps his heart might be taken off from presuming 1. One is That it is a difficult thing to repent Why Repentance is the new setting of the heart and life it is the very contradiction of a mans former love and practise it is the undoing of all his doings it is the shifting as it were of his nature and the transplanting of himself the divorcing of the affections the new bent and edge of the soul for all holy and pious obedience and is this an easie thing Is it easie for a man to become an enemy to himself to lay down his sweet delight his precious profits his closer nature to judge and condemn his heart and wayes for ever to forsake his own counsels his own inclinations his own courses Know you not that to sneath up but an idle word and form of language is not so facile an act how much more then to put off root and branch Do we not stick in the same sins after many threatnings of wrath after many executions of Judgement after many invitations by mercies after dayly counsels and directions by thy Word after instances and examples of punishment nay after particular and personal experiences of the deceitfulness and bitterness of our sinnings Doth not this shew that it is a difficult thing to repent Nay Take an Assay of thy heart begin the study of thy self remember thy doings which have not been good thy wayes that have been evil summon up all the matter of Repentance for if Repentance be true it must be an universal turning and then set upon the work of Repentance and tell me whether former sins cannot plead hard for future and constant possession whether they cannot work mightily and deceitfully tell me how willing and ready thou shalt find thy heart which comes to this duty as a Thief to the Executioner Tell me whether Satan will easily give up his Title and interest and will give Christ possession quietly without many fervent suits to heaven yea without bitter and strong conflicts yea unless the Almighty God himself come in and turn him out of thy heart and turn thy heart to him 2. Another things is this That the more a man doth sin the more he disables himself to repent Tell me seriously Doth not the Debt weaken his ability of payment by greater engagements Doth not the disease consume the powers of nature by its encrease Why what is that which spoils us and disarms us of strength is it not sin then the more sinning still the less strength to return from sin Nay sin doth not only corrupt our strength by multiplied sinnings but withal increaseth its own strength the more a man doth sin the weaker and weaker he becomes and sin thereby becomes stronger and stronger Now tell me if it be hard for thee in strength to turn from sin will it not be harder for thee in weakness to conquer strength if thou canst not step over the brook why dost imagine it easie to stride over the Ocean If thou canst nor stand before the child thinks thou in a moment to cast down the strong man surely by thy continued and multiplied course of sinning thy mind is more blinded and thy Judgement is more corrupted and thy love is more inflamed and thy heart is more hardned and art not thou then more disabled Once again by thy more sinnings the Counsels of God are more despised by thee and the Spirit of God is more grieved and resisted by thee and the Mercies of God are more abused by thee and the patience of God is more profaned and injured by thee so that God in Justice may forsake thee and deny his hand for ever unto thee and then thou what wilt thou do what canst thou do I beseech you lay these things to heart they may check and hold off your hearts from presuming why thinks the soul here is a temptation to sin yea but I must repent and it is not so easie that to do if it be let me try about my former sins without a new addition now and then this I am sure of that the more sinnings will make the work of Repentance more hard forasmuch as they wedge in the sin more into the affections and provoke God more c. therefore it shall suffice me to have sinned already I will adventure no more nor no further Seventhly Consider That thy life is short and thy account Thy life is short and thy account sure is sure Thou sinnest this moment and art not sure to live till the next day and hast not assurance of life till to morrow for what is our life but a lease of time which God lets to man the date of which is only known to God and commanded by him Saint James would not have us talk of to morrow and Christ would not have us think of any more then for two days and Paul saith That the present time is the acceptable time and the day of salvation Thou fool said Christ this night shall they take away thy soul death attends thee every moment it is even laying hands on thee in the womb and thou art never going to sin but death saith Lord shall I now strike him arrest him in his very rebellion Now if a man were effectually perswaded of this perhaps he would not presume to sin
and every sin is a lye let it pretend much yet it advantageth nothing Suppose a man had an estate worth 10000 li. and he should receive a baby for it tell me what he got O that precious soule of man which is more worth then a world is uttelry lost by sin what then doth the service of it profit him for what is a man profited saith our Saviour though he gaine the whole world if he lose his own soule thou Gets a little credit by thy sinning yea but whith whom And what is that whiles the great God doth disgrace thee and thine own conscience doth often shame thee Thou gets a little wealth by thy sinning yea but what is that Treasure of wickednesse but a Treasury of wrath against the day of wrath Thou gets a little pleasure by thy sinning yea but what are these short minutes of joy to those eternall nights of darknesse in which they must end and be swallowed up one fall breaks all the glasse to pieces and one anguish of conscience or peal of death blasts and sinkes all the vaine triumphings of a sinfull heart sin may pretend faire and promise much but the wages thereof i. that which thou must expect for thy service is death yea that death which is opposed to eternall life Rom. 6. vlt. 6. It is a most uncomfortable service How oft is the servant of A most uncomfortable service sin in the depths of feare and in the heights of trouble his very sinnings are more his torments then his joyes he is many times vexed with thoughts how to sin and afterwards he is hewed in his conscience for his sinning though he hath not grace to make him grieve yet he hath a conscience which can make him tremble the very surfeits of his sins do distaste his soul and make him of times weary of his very life he is ashamed of Company and dares not yet to be solitary The night is many times a terror unto him and the day renewes his anguish though the servant of sin in the transient flash of his spirit out-braves al counsell yet he doth ordinarily feel infinite gripes within either he is utterly unsensible of his misery which is one of the greatest judgements or he his sensible and then he feeles a Hell of horror for his lewd obedience Nay so exceedingly high do the distresses sometimes prevaile that he his forced to disparie of all mercy and thinking to ease himselfe of some flames greedily throwes away himselfe into the very gulfe of Hell-fire what shall I say more where sin hath the dominion over a person a man is a slave to the Devill and a servant to that which will vex him and wound him and damne him he never enjoyes himselfe nor shall he ever enjoy God unless that yoke of service be broken and therefore good reason hath any man to pray against the habituall dominion of sin SECT IV. THus for the explication now somthing for the Application Vses thereof unto our selves where first let me begin with inquirie Inquire whether sin have Dominion over us what thinke we of the dominion of sin within our soules You will say we trust there is noe such thing I Remember Object the Jewes said as much to Christ in a case not much unlike Sol. we are Abrahams seed said they we were never in Bondage Joh. 8. 33. But Christ replied verily verily I say unto you whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin v. 34. I will premise a few things at this time 1. No man living but he is borne a servant to sin sin is his Some things premised Noe man but is borne a servant to sin Lord before he can tell who is his Master sin requires not age to set on the crown but even in the very wombe doth it begin its reign and poysons and impaireth our whole nature therefore the Apostle saith that by nature we are the children of disobedience and wrath as well as others Ephesians 2. 2. it is the disposition and sway and bent of us to sin and to walke on in sin 2. It is an hard thing to get off the dominion of sinne Sin is a It is a hard thing to get off the dominion of sin strong man It hath possession and goes not out by entreaty or bribe but it must be by force by one that his stronger I assure you that the almighty God must reveal his own arme and he must cast down strong holds he must worke a kinde of a miracle or else sin will still be a Lord and the sinner will be a servant to his lusts A man may change any Master soever and with more ease then sin Thirdly it is very manifest that sin hath the dominion in many It is manifest that sin hath dominion in many as In those whom noe kind of arguments can turne from sin persons I will present unto you such instances which you shall confesse do evince so much 1. What thinke you hath not sin the dominion where noe kinde of arguments and dealings are able to disengage the heart and to turn it when no kindes of merciful Arguments and no kinds of just threatnings and no sense of bitternesse can yet discovenant and diservice the soul but still it holds the league keeps the agreement with sin now then how often hath God come to many persons and offered unto them his pardoning mercies the blood of Christ and eternal life if they would leave such a sin of drunkennesse such a sin of filthinesse such a sin of worldlinesse but unrighteous they were and unrighteous still they are and will be How often hath God set the point of the sword upon the breast of a sinner revealing his wrath threatning death and Hell if he will not leave the service of his sin nay scourged his estate for his sinning nay scourged his body nay his soul conscience and all this to renounce his sinfull Lord yet men hold fast their wickedness they yet give over themselves to sin with greediness they study how to fulfill their lusts and rejoyce when they have done evil doth not this shew that the heart is indeed indeared and totally emancipated by a strong and elective subjection unto sin What think you of such whose hearts cannot endure the Dominion In those who cannot endure the dominion of Jesus Christ of Jesus Christ and the service of righteousnesse it is even a tormenting slavery unto them even the imaginations thereof are so The Soule of a man cannot serve two Masters and there are but two of them upon which our service can be bestowed either sin or Christ the Apostle intimated as much Rom. 6. 16. Know ye not that to whom ye yeeld your selves servants to obey his servants ●● are to whom you obey whither of sin unto death or of obedience unto righteousness so that these divide the soul if a man doth yield obedience unto righteousness he is then no servant of sin
Peter untrusty to his master yet you shall presently find himselfe bitterly weeping for his miscarriage Whereas the servants of sinne do the work and take the wages they sin and rejoyce when they have done evil yet the servants of righteousnesse actively afflict their hearts for that which hath deceived them and prevailed upon them Obj. It is granted that terror may gripe an evill heart for evil doing but there is a great difference betwixt a sword which wounds and a fountain that runs Sol. Conscience may be wounded in the good and in the bad but besides this that acted sinnes are a good mans wound they are also his great grief of soul 2. Another is earnest desire of recovery It is a singular Earnest desire of recovery and observable matter this when a man hath sinned to whom he holds out his hand upon it The servant of sin doth work sinne and his hand stretcheth out it self as a servant still as ready to advance and finish the service sinne is his work and delight it is the Lord and captain after which he would yet march But an holy man not under dominion but surprisal not under service but captivity he is not himself till he hath recovered his liberty and strength There is such an high displeasure with himselfe and with his facts that he will go free he will not have his eare bo●ed to serve such a Master as sin Good Lord how his heart trembles how his heart meditates cast about works strives sometimes he cries out ah wicked a deceitful heart sometimes he condemnes himself what a beast was I thus to sin sometimes he looks up toward heaven and sighs bitterly Ah! what a God have I provoked what mercies have I wronged sometimes he looks in and weeps and saith ah what motions did I withstand what a spi●it have I grieved how unlike my self is my self sometimes he is down in prayer O Lord forgive blot out heal help recover my heart again unto thee One way o● other is his soul working like a fountaine in which dirt is cast till it hath purged out the filth he is not at rest till sinne be more subdued his heart more changed his affections more humbled his judgement more cleared his conscience more preserved his peace more confirmed his soul not only recovered but also bettered yea thus it will be with such an heart which clears it that sin hath not dominion that though sin prevaile to action yet it shall not to affection though I did the evil yet I hate it though it did prevail yet I will not serve it though it hath beat me down as a tyrant yet I will not fol●ow it as my Lord nay I am not at quiet till I can recover the si●ht of my Lord Ch●ist againe and have made my ●eace and strengthned my heart for more loyal service unto him The third is strong ha●red and conflict the War is more increased Strong hatred by victory revenge is more rai●ed 2 Cor. 7. SECT V. A Second Use from Davids prayer against the dominion Use 2 of sin shall be for thankfulnesse to such in whom this dominion For thankfulness to such in whom the dominion is broken off is broken off Though there be so much of sinne remaining as may keep thee humble and watchful yet if dominion be gone there is so much done as may challenge from thee to be heartily thankful give me leave to put on this a little Six motives Six motives It is deliverance from the greatest evil 1. Deliverance from the greatest evil is reason enough of great thanks It is more then if God delivered thee from hell if he hath delivered thee from the dominion of sinne No hell is like sinne ●eigning for as much as torment in strength is nothing to sin in strength that is indeed a very miserable thing but this a very evil thing sinne is worse then all punishment and reigning sinne is the worst of all sinne 2. None but God could deliver thee and therefore if he None but God could deliver thee hath done it blesse him A man may deliver his friend out of prison by paying his debt A father may deliver his child out of captivity by sending his ransome A Country may be delivered from the oppression of an invading tyrant by great strength of its own But there are two hands out of which none but God can deliver one is Satans another is our own As David spake in another case thou hast loo●ed the bands of my distresse and it is the Lord who subdueth the people under me and it is not my bowe nor my sword c. that I say here it is not your own arme which hath gotten you the victory no hand but Gods high hand which hath delivered you from the powers of darknesse which hath kept sin from dominion which hath cast out the strong man which hath cast down the stron● holds thou wast not so much as sensible of thine own vassailage or of sinnes dominion thou hadst not power to feel much lesse to conquer and deliver And when thou wert sensible of sinne thy heart did not behave it self as an enemy but as a friend most willingly bowing under the yoke and readily embracing the lusts and motions of the law of sin when thou hast been called upon to put off the yoke and to come out of the house of bondage the Hebrew servant who loved his Master was never more unwilling to part from his house then thy heart was to come off from thy love and service of thy sins And yet the almighty God in compassion to thy soule hath delivered thee he hath disthroned sin he hath drawn off thy heart to a better Lord and would not suffer sin to rule thee but by the mighty power of his grace hath made thee free from the house of most heavy bondage Therefore not to thy good nature nor to thy free-will nor to thy abilities nor to thy wit or parts or reason but to the Lord be all the glory the victory is his therefore let the praise be his 3. It is speciall grace and mercy Paul stiles it rich mercy and It is speciall grace and mercy great love and riches of grace Eph. 2. It is mercy to be rid of a disease more of a sin to resist a temptation much more to take off dominion the spirit of Christ only doth it the more singular a mercy is the more thankfull should we be Titus 3. 3. We our selves also were sometimes foolish disobedient deceived serving divers lusts and pleasures c. v. 4. But after that the kindnesse and love of God our Saviour toward man appeared v. 5. According to his mercy he saved us thou hast in love to my soul delivered it from the pit of corruption said Hezekiah Esa 38. 17. O then what a mercy is it to be delivered from the power of sinfull dominion If thou were rid of an hard Master that would
he hath peculiar cause of great humblings speediest reformings vehement Answered beggings at the throne of grace for mercy and for the mighty power of Jesus Christ to release and deliver his soule But then let us carefully observe whither this of which a man complaines be sin in dominion or not perhaps it may be somthing else and then the soule must be advised and directed in a more especiall way Why I finde such strong and manifold inclinations of sin within me daring forth into so many vile imaginations and Doubts for the strong inclinations of sin working down to draw my affections woe's me what is the dominion of sin but this and who but a slave of sin is hurried with such motions of sin it cannot be that my heart should be good whilest inclinations are soe manifoldly bad To this let me shape a few answers 1. First I demand how the heart stands affected toward these Answered How stands ●hy heart manifold inclinations doest thou approve them or dis-allow affected to these inclinations them doest thou love them or doest thou hate them verily saith the soule I dislike them and hate them they are the burden of my soule And why so why because God is dishonou●ed by them and they are contrary to his holy will and they are evill and filthy O I had rather be in any miserable estate then in this sinfull and vile estate Now then observe sin hath not dominion in thee for where sin hath dominion sin is not formally and purely hated The dominion of sin doth not consist in the multiplicity of Note motions a man may have many enemies to assault him and yet love and serve none so a man may have many sins inclining and tempting and yet be a servant to none of them for it is not the temptation of sin which infal●ibly argues dominion but the willing resi●nation of the heart the subjection of the heart to those motions and temptations of sin this necessarily is required to make dominion but now thy heart doth not so it doth not resign up it selfe it yeelds not subjection for asmuch as it doth hate and resist and bewaile sin even in temptation Of all the signes of a good heart of a heart that is delivered from sins dominion this is one of the best and surest viz. That it hates and resists and bewailes sin when it is only in temptation when a man hath committed a sin then the conscience being made guilty may alone breake and afflict and this may befal even a wicked man there is now some other thing besides sin in the filthinesse of it to worke trouble and griefe viz. The guilt and accusation of it but when sin is resisted and bewailed in the temptation before it hath got out into actuall commission now the peculiar reason of trouble is the formall vilenesse of sin because it is so base and so opposite to ●od Secondly I demand what doest thou against these sinful What doest thou against these sinful inclinations inclinations every man hath some weapons or other and in case of anguish he is apt to draw them what weapons hast thou in thy hand and to what end doest thou mannage them Do not many and strong temptations of sin occasion many and strong supplications the more that sin inclines the more doth thy heart incline to God by prayer for more grace to resist for more strength to subdue doest thou not by reading and hearing and inquiry labour to finde out the manifold helpes and victories of a tempted and an assaulted soule doest thou not keep the precepts of God in thy heart and the threatnings of God in thy heart that thou mayest feare to offend him and the promises of God which yet hearten thee to withstand What doth all this demonstrate but that sin is not in dominion it is I confesse thy troublesome enemy but it is not thy ruling Lord it is that which doth molest thee it is not that which doth reign in thee it is that which would have dominion but it is not that which hath dominion it is that which doth assault thy affection but is not that which hath got thine heart thou art but in a greater war Neverthelesse thou art not so much as in captivity though in a strong conflict Yea but yet I feel one thing perhaps worse then all this sin Object workes in me after a more peculiar manner their is a particular Doubts because of some Speciall sinfull inclination sinfull inclination in me and so hath it been all my dayes if I were to give you the sum of my life I could lay out that particular inclination above all the rest like a threed which goes through the whole piece such a sin which I have seen long since felt it and I thought bewailed it and resisted it a long time and yet here it lives still workes still can it be that sin Sol. should not have dominion where some one speciall corruption Answered yet lives I must be warily tender to Resolve this scruple for asmuch as 1. Particular subjection is enough to set up dominion 2. Hypocrites are under the reigne of speciall lust and particular sins both which I touched heretofore But to the scruple take me thus Conversion doth not totally remove any one sinfull inclination 4. Things 1. That when God doth convert the soul no one sinfull inclination is totally removed though every one be in some measure changed The corrupt nature doth yet remaine and all its principles or particular inclinations to particular sins for grace doth not change us by a present Annihilation of sin but by a powerfull alienation of our hearts from it Sin may work in a man when rescued out of the dominion of sin in a more particular way Secondly note that sin may worke even in a man rescued out of its dominion is a more singular or particular way my meaning is this that there may be in him yet a more particular twange and more apt inclination and propension to some one sin rather then to another Sin yet abiding may take the advantage of the same complexion still remaining and of the same condition and calling yet continuing and without all doubt most men living whether good or whether bad do finde more to do with some one sinful inclination then with another Thirdly consider usually that particular inclination which was in dominion before conversion is most frequent in inclination That particular inclination which was in dominion before is usually most frequent in inclination after calling Reasons of it after our calling And I will give you some probable Reasons thereof One because that was the spring of the sinne of our custome which sent out and fed the issue by which the soule was so beaten in the path and way of sinning so that the old and accustomed nature cannot easily or presently forget its ancient and wonted bents a custome will hardly or
never go off without some after inclinations or dispositions that way Another because the new resistances of a converted heart and its cares and studies are most against the particular sinne of its special inclinations there it deals most opposeth most humbles most Now sin doth usually stickle and stirre most where it is most pursued that particular sin whose death thou layest at most that will strive to assaile and perplex and intangle thee most the more humble thou labourest to be the more shalt thou finde proud thoughts to assault though not to conquer thee and the more meek thou labours to be the more ado shalt thou have with thy passions for as much as no sin will be executed quietly and every nature stirs busily in its own defence we are weakest there and God drawes our greatest watch and strength thither a man sooner falls under lesser conflicts when a sinne hath been beaten upon by much temptation and conflict the heart grows hereby more ready resolute and you shall finde it that after frequent and long exercise with a particular corruption that it shall not easily get within the soul but upon a pause and cessation Fourthly observe that there is a difference twixt the life of motion and the life of affection its true thy special inclination There is a difference betwixt a life of m●tion and a life of affection lives in thee sti●l by way of motion but doth it live in thee still by way of affection it did incline heretofore and thou lovedst it it inclines now and thou hates it the inclination is the same for the matter but thy heart is not the same for the disposition toward it when the iron is hot you may bring a figure and put it on and the iron will take the stamp and impression bring the same figure and seal to it when it is col● now it will not receive it the seale and the figure of the seal is the same but the temper and the disposition of the iron as hot and as cold is not the same Saint Ambrose relates of the young traveller who went out an uncleane person but returned a chast person and his old quean met with him after his r●turn and began her wanton salutes unto him from whom and which he angerly turned aside and neglects her why said she Ego sum ego yea but saith he Ego non sum ego I am not so is it here in this case the inclination is the same to the same sin yea but the affection is not now to that inclination as it hath been But where sin hath dominion affections do concur with the special inclination Take all that I shall say to this in a few words 1. It is certain that in an evil man there is a frequency in a particular inclination and so there may be in a good man but There is a difference betwixt frequent inclinations in an evill and a good man thus they differ In an evil man the frequent inclination is the frequent progress of a King In a good man it is the fervent egresse or attempt of an enemy In an evil man the frequency of inclination is to maintain possession In a good man it is but a malicious endeavour Though the Assault be frequent yet the Resistance is constant Not the frequency of inclination but the Ardency of subjection shewes dominion by force if it were possible to regaine an entrance 2. This is some comfort that though the assault be frequent yet the resistance is constant and that concludes against sinnes dominion 3. Not the frequency of inclination but the ardency of subjection evidenceth sinnes dominion not who quarrels with me most but who effectually commands me he is my Lord not he who makes the most motions but on whom the woman casts her heart that is the husband 't is my love and service which infallibly concludes dominion Obj. 3. But yet the soul sticks I am sold under sinne and Doubt from the prevailing of sinne taken captive sinne hath inclined and prevailed what surer argument of dominion then victory There are three things which I would say to this scruple Answered 1. One is this that it is a very sad scruple any particular victory of any great sin for to that I intend the case makes a wonderful change 2. Another is this comfort cannot be applied neither will the conscience receive it till repentance be renewed 3. Yet there is a difference twixt a particular victory and the dominion of sin there may be a surprisal where yet a Kingdom is not established 1. For the first of these all particular victories are sad things Particular victories are sad things I do no not now speak of victories in respect of inward motion or of passion or distemper through dulness and melancholy but of victory in respect of action and that not by meer omission not by imperfection in best services but by grosse commissions suppose it Davids case or Noahs case the one for uncleanness the other for drunkennesse These acted wickednesses are sore evils very abominable to the Lord very inglorious to religion very wounding to conscience extreamly quenching of the spirit of grace For as much as the more grosse any sin is the worse is it in the commission every acting of sin receiving some intention and aggravation from the immediate kinde and quality of the sin Again the better the man is the worse is a lewd kinde of sinning in him the quality of the person ever contributing more exceedingnesse to the sin for he sins against more light against more mercy against more help and strength against more active corrections of conscience with more advantage to the corruption of other men with more advantage to the beauty and credit of holinesse yea besides these formal vilenesses O what strange effects break in upon the soul what horror what fear what mis-givings what despair oft-times with the fruits thereof 2. Comfort will never be applyed to a person in this condition Comfort will not be applied to such a one till repentance be renued untill repentance be renewed Beloved there is a difference of persons and a difference of actions and a difference of times and a difference of applications Do I finde an evil man brought to the sight of his sinnes to saddest humbling for them to sincere desire to come off from them to pantings after grace and mercy I now come in with the blood of Christ with the tender and gracious promises refreshing such a soul with assurance of freest and fullest mercy Do I finde a good man weak in duty strong in affection hearty against all sin yet troubled with the insolent motions of many corruptions would not do evil and yet is not rid of it would do good but then findes evil is present with him I labour to raise and hold up such an heart to look on God through Christ for acceptance to lay hold on Christ for strength
with such sad and bitter dejection of spirit for his renued folly that this is an argument that he is not a chearful and willing servant to sin but only an enemy not able enough to bear off a second shock or assault Object Yet this satisfies not for the most still objects But it is a Custome this is custome and custome cannot be without Dominion I answer three things Answered If it were a custome it is not best to hold on First suppose the worst that it were custome and dominion what is the course to be taken wouldest thou think it best to hold on wouldest thou live thus still God hath pardoned and he hath changed many a soul which hath been customary in sinne and in whom sin hath had dominion nay not any before conversion but sin had dominion in him and some sinne or other was his customary path Thy safest and wisest course were not thus to stick at the custome and dominion but to come unto God and to beseech him to shew thee mercy and to give thee grace and Christ to subdue the dominion and to break the custom A custome of sinning is a symptome of sin in dominion Secondly I think that a custome of sinning is a direct symptome of sinne in dominion No man can trade in a sinne but you may easily say who is his Master his servants we are whom we obey 3. But then I would have you to remember that as all continuing inclinations argue not dominion so some continued Yet come repeated acts of sin do not argue a custome or repeated acts of sin do not always argue custome though custome necessarily includes either in good or bad thin●s a repetition of acts a going over of the same part or lesson again and again it being a path often walked over Yet every gemination of acts is not presently a custome I think we may thus distinguish twixt sinful acts multiplied by custome which is rooted in dominion and those which fall out by accident as it were and rooted onely in tyranny Three differences twixt acts geminated and custome Differences twixt acts geminated and custome Renewed acts are acts of custome where the Possession is strong and quiet 1. Where the renewed acts of sinne owe themselves to custome there the possession is both strong and quiet for if I mistake not it is not meerly how often or how long I have been at or have dwelt in the house which makes custome and see me the Lord of that house but what right and what peaceable possession One stronger then I may hold my land from me and dwell in my house a long time yet if I make my exceptions and hold a suit against him his long dwelling is but an usurping neither is it a legal custome though perhaps of long continuance Though sin still dwells in a good soul and continues there in despight of him and the person doth oft-times through the captivating force of it do many sinful acts and perhaps the same yet it is not custome unless the possession be quiet and peaceable if he did like Issachar bow under the burden and yeeld up the writings and keys if he did quietly resign up his heart to sin and so go on from sinne to sinne this were custome and concluded dominion But so long as that soul puts in exceptions prefers a bill of tears complaints supplications to Christ to conquer this usurping tyrant to give grace to recover its hold and strength to withstand and subdue it Though the acts be many and to be bewailed yet they are not come to a custome which sets up Dominion 2. Where the renued acts are acts of custome there the acting is natural and easie Custome we know is another nature Renewed acts are acts of custome when the acting is naturall and easie and every nature doth easily let go its acts how easie is it for the eye to see and the ear to hear or the water to moysten or the earth to descend Let nature alone she hath no impediment from her self to her acts and it is her perfection to act and therefore her acts are easie It is thus with sinful acts flowing out of Custome they come from the heart as waters from a spring and rise from it as sparks from the fire O how nimble and dextrous and quick is the sinner to sin you need not tempt him he can tempt himself you need not use arguments to perswade and entise him the accustomed drunkard knows the way alone to the Cup-house and the covetous heart to unlawful methods of gain Balaam can quickly get on horse-back for moneys sake to curse Israel and Judas needs no messenger he can go himself to the High-Priest But when the renued acts depend rather on tyranny then custom there they come off more hardly with more difficulty the sin is marred perhaps many times before it is done the person sees it is vile and resists it then the pleasure and profit tempts him to which he begins to hearken but presently his heart misgives him it is not right and it will end in bitterness he prays and yet is tempted fights and yet is tempted resists and yet is vanquished 3. Where the renued acts owe themselves to custome there a Renewed acts are acts of custome when a man is not easily brought off man is not easily brought off 't is my custome saith the man I cannot help it and I will not leave it I assure you where sinful acts rise to custome there is no argument but either a present fear of hell to hold them in or a mighty presence of grace to put them off words will not prevaile with men accustomed to sin But where the renued acts owe themselves to tyranny though many words did bring into the sin yet a few words will serve to break off the sin one whisper of conscience ah what hast thou done one word of Nathans to David thou art the man one look of Christ on Peter made him remember and to go out and weep bitterly SECT VI. NOw I proceed to a third Use which shall be the last Vse 3 that I will make of this subject and that shall be for Direction how to get off sins Dominion direction how to get off the dominion of sin You remember that I distinguished heretofore of a twofold Dominion of sin one was natural under which every man is held before his conversion Another was actual which consisted in a particular prevalency even upon a man converted and changed According to either there must be distinct Directions 1. Against Natural Dominion Against naturall dominion For this we must consider two things First what keeps and strengthens that Dominion Secondly what may demolish and subdue it and accordingly apply our selves Quest 1. For the first let us enquire what keeps up and strengthens the natural dominion of sin and accordingly work against What strengthens naturall dominion worke against
Any thing may prove too strong for him who conceives himself too strong for any thing He that will venture upon sinful provocations and occasions disarms his soul and lays his very heart naked to a conquest A Christian may do very much in good wayes which have Gods warrant to lead him and Gods promise to keep him but if he alone will be presuming as the Israelites who would go up to fight upon their own humour fell and lost so shall a man presently learne his owne weaknesse by the strength of sinnes surprisal many a man hath been spiritually wounded not because he had no grace but because he would adventure upon the strength of it without any security from God 3. That pardon is not so easily obtained Nor the soul so And that pardon is not easily obtained quickly recovered after particular dominions It is an easie thing to slip into sinne it is difficult to get out of it a little thing will serve to distemper our health and yet much Physick is required to set the humours streight again All entrances to sinne are with the greater facility for then temptations and carnal affections blinde our judgements but the recoveries are the harder for now the vilenesse and hainousnesse of the sinning appears more distinctly and the conscience works more sharply and vehemently and our very graces are the more disabled Assuredly if you will venture to sinne you lose a friend of God and encouragement in conscience and strength in your soules this very conceit that thou shouldest easily make thy peace with God and finde mercy though thou didst sin I say this very conceit will mightily afflict thy soul and aggravate thy transgression when thou beholds thy soul in blood for sinnings mercy is the most singular ground of repentance and nothing stings us more for sinning then this that we abused mercies to invite us Therefore when sin tempts thee resist it yeeld not to it say thus who would adventure the sweet mercies of a gracious God to satisfie the lusts of a damnable sin and why should I be so mad having health to make my self sick to break the bones which yet are whole to unsettle the peace of my conscience to weaken my graces to dis-joynt my estate If as now I am I have much to do ah what folly is it to make more woful work for my soul How justly may God leave me who will forsake him for that which I know will displease him and what if he should ri●hteously deny me grace to repent who proudly will abuse his grace to sinne Beloved let the judgement at all times be thus effectually convinced and it may prove a sin●ular me●ns and help against particular temptations of sinne by which 〈◊〉 is attained 3. Be not in the ways of Dominion great sinnings 〈…〉 alway prevaile at first sight but they have a traine 〈…〉 thod to prepare the soul and then on a sudden they violently surprise it There are these methods First perhaps naked motions the vile heart gives up only a shew of a particular sin in an imagination our thought presents the kinds of sinnin and so falls in again Then perhaps a careless use of our senses which wandring without regard light upon some object which fits the former sinful motions and strongly inlivens them After this active contemplation of these sinful motions not to detest and bewaile them but to look upon them in an idle way After this a meditation of them which is a more deliberate entertainment of them which now riseth to a kind of treaty in the minde where the sinful motion craves entertainment by arguments of profit or pleasure on credit then a darting down to the affections to hearken and delight Then upon the next occasion an acting of all this sinful imagination and plot Brethren if you love your souls take off sinnes in their entrances before they gather head if a man could keep sinne from pleading he might keep himself from acting Break the egg and you need not feare the flying of the bird Crush Simile sinne in motion and it is a clear way to prevent sin in dominion The match will never be made if all treaties be rejected little motions are the principles of great sinnes as springs of rivers and sparks of flames Therefore let us this do resist motions to sin as a man should resist the actings of sin do not say it is but a thought Jehues army came after the scouts Great sinning may attend little and flattered imaginations he who slights inward thoughts and is careless of his outward senses is in a faire way to become a great sinner Sue out your standing by by prayer and faith Fourthly sue out your standing by prayer and faith I will tell you two things 1. That the strongest grace cannot free us from the fiercest assaults even the best heart and most eminent Christian is exposed to the foulest and most violent temptations of sin and Satan 2. That this resisting strength which keeps sin from dominion is in God and not in himself As that we become good is from the goodnesse of Gods grace so that we prove not bad is from the greatnesse of Gods power no man is able to change his own heart nor is his heart his own guard Therefore under all temptations be at prayer and faith These are the two wings of the soul c. Some victories are best had by standing up but that against sin is surest by kneeling down O when the heart is much in prayer it is then most in strength prayer engageth all heaven against a corruption And God hath promised to subdue iniquities and that sin shall not have dominion Rom. 6. 14. Now what he hath promised that he is able to perform and will if we can pray and believe We give sinne the great advantage when we slack our prayers and lay aside our faith It is the wisest art of a tempted soul to decline all occasions to be under prevailing Ordinances and to use prayer and exercise faith according to the nature kind and measure of sinful motions and inclinations PSAL. 19. 13. Then shall I be upright and I shall be innocent from that great transgression CHAP. V. YOu may remember that heretofore we have handled Davids petitions against sinne 1. In secrecy 2. In presumption 3. In dominion Now we proceed to speak something of the conclusion or inference which that holy and sweet Psalmist draws from all this Then shall I be upright and innocent from that great transgression To me it seemeth that Davids special aime that white or mark which he had in his eye was this to be upright he knew well that that was it which God looked for which God most of all prized and which for his soul would prove most necessary and comfortable and withall he well knew that the allowance of secret sinnes or the wallowing in great transgressions were quite contrary thereto And therefore he prays earnestly
constraine him 2. Cor. 5. 11 14. Both had an influence upon the Apostle Terror and love Simile judgement and mercy as we read of the woman who departed from the sepulchre that it was with feare and joy with the one and with the other so may our services come out and our sins be held of both out of love and out of feare For these two are not opposite one to another as grace and sin but may mingle together as severall ingredients in the same Physicke Yet one word more must be added by way of distinction that there is a twofold feare A twofold fear Servile One is servile which depends intirely on compelling arguments without any naturall inclination or disposition of the person The acts here are drawen out not from any aptnesse of the will or private approbation of the judgement nay these absolutely considered sway and incline a man a quite contrary way contrary to the acts of abstaining o● acting if a man who workes onely with servil feare might do what he liked and might chose his owne way and service he had rather A thousand times be at his sins and lay aside his worke of duty Now I said if a man doth abstaine from sinne or act duty meerly out of a servile feare he is not upright why because in uprightnesse the heart is carried against sin and the will is inclined to duty both which are wanting where feare is only servile Fillial Another is ingenious filial which is an enlarging feare such a feare as is not only not against the holy bent and inclination of the heart but it is likewise a furtherance an adiument it is as it were a farther strength imprinted into the Bowl which is rightly framed to runne and draw with a true by as This fear doth consist with uprightnesse and is necessary to every good Christian who ought to set up all the arguments which God is pleased to propound to the soul either to keep it off from sin or to draw it out to duty yet so as love acts its part too Ob. But now there will fall in one scruple with all this how How shall I know my abstainings from sin and acting duty springs out of naked feare or a feare commixt with love Where they proceed out of meer feare may I know whither my abstainings from sin or acting of duty springs out of naked feare or else out of a feare commixt with love And rather out of love then feare Sol. To resolve you in this and let me tell you this conduceth much to the discovery of uprightnesse consider 1. That where they proceed out of naked and meer feare Two Things 1. There is a contrary annd full regreeting of the heart against There is a contrary regreet of the heart against them them the bent of the heart is otherwise set for all acts of meer feare I speake of morall acts are reputed violent and involuntary they arise from a constraint and all constraints urge out acts which the nature if it were it selfe would not incline to nay the nature drawes against what it doth if it doth do any thing out of meer feare 2. Acts depending upon naked and meer feare doe cease when Acts depending upon feare cease when the motives of the feare ceaseth the motives or causes of that feare do cease and are still As the fable hath it of the frogs that though naturally they are inclined to croke yet when Jupiter threw downe the tree amongst them they were all husht and silent yet at length seeing no harme to ensue they set up their ugly note againe so evill men whose hearts are bent to sin may yet in the time of feare draw in hold off from sinning the beastly drunkard will not call for a cup to carouse nor the filthy wanton for his Queane to embrace on his death-bed he feares the flames of hell instantly to claspe him But let the motives of feare cease why he is as averse to that reformation which he professed and he is as facill and forward to that evill which he seemed to defie as the water is to fly out and run in its course which hath been for a while violently barred up and stoped As the Israelites who came off from sinning and into obedience upon the meer call of the stroke either of the sword or of the plague they did start aside Like a broken bowe Psal 78. 57. they served under the rod but when that was off they returned to the accustomed bent of sinning presently 2. That where they proceed out of feare mixt with love and Where they proceed out of fear mixt with love A man hath an eye to divine glory more then to his own safty rather out of love Foure Things 1. If love is mixt with feare in the obedience there a man hath an eye to divine glory as much if not more then to his owne safety Where meer feare prevailes to the worke there it sati●fies the man if he may after all sleep in a whole skin if he may be preserved and be secure what glory God may have he cares not nor mindes it directly But now if service spring out of love to God here my safety satisfies me not I do aime at Gods glory for I love him and love his praise as on the contrary where a man abstaines from sin out of meer feare he doth it not because else God shall have dishonor dishonor to God is not it which prevailes but his own quiet and personall exemption from paine and wrath and infamy these only sway with him and. 2. where love and feare concurres to set out the obedient acts there acceptance is propounded by the soule as well as recompence it will not suffice me that I shall have my pay but it Acceptance is propounded by him as well as recompence more affects me that God will be pleased to accept of me This is a truth that nothing but love will satisfie love the love of acceptance exceedingly answers all the acts which come from the love of obedience that I shall decline vengeance by such duties alas that is not all Nay but I bend and strive to finde acceptance with my God and Father love is the most predominant cause 3. Love is not only commixt with feare but is a more predominant cause in abstaining from sins where the contrariety of the act to God swayes and workes more upon the soule then the contrariety of the punishment to the man what 's that that is the offence by the vilenesse of sinning is far more grievous to my soule then the sense of punishment for sinning nay when the soule in a free and able estate to judge can utter from a sound conscience that were it to make its choices it had rather a thousand times submit to the punishment of sin then to the acting of sin verily if such a person abstaine from sin the abstaining is not out
to walk with him he would be careful to please him fearful to offend him ready to obey him would be kept in for God he would not make so many strayings he would minde Gods glory more Thirdly get to hate sin A secret love of sin after all restraints and pauses will draw the soule aside It will like a covered Get to hate sin disease break out againe There are three things in hatred which contribute to uprightnesse 1. It is an inward aversation the very heart is drawen off from an object and the heart is filled with a loathing and a detestation of the evill not the tongue and looks onely but the very inclination of the will is turned aside 2. It is universall for hatred is of the kinde the will in the whole latitude of it is the object of hatred I hate every false way said David Psal 119. 3. It is permanent and durable passion is a storme which will quickly off but hatred is a setled quality arguments allay it not nor doth time remove it what have I to do any more with Idols said Ephraim Hosea 14. 8. They shall defile their coverings and say unto them get thee hence Esa 30. 22. So that if a man could get the hatred of sin he should quickly finde an even uprightnesse The cause why a man is not even in his walking is either because 1. His heart is not bent against sinne but gives a delightful way unto it it doth not resist and loath it but harbours and favours it 2. Some one particular lust winnes and gaines upon the soule though some are unacted yet one speciall lust is retained which hath power to command and rule the life 3. He is carried against sin upon mutable and decaying grounds which being removed the heart then returnes to its proper and naturall bent But now if spiritual hatred of sinne were implanted then the combat twixt sin and the person would be inward the very heart would loath the nature and inclinations of it and it would be universall and constant so that here would arise a generall evennesse in a mans coversation Unevenness though it appear without yet it begins within the heart is the maine wheele of a mans course and therefore if love gets the heart for God and hatred rules the heart against sin you may very well believe that these two will yeeld out a very upright endeavour and course of holinesse In spirituals that which keeps the fountaine doth keep the streame and that which betters the heart doth likwise well order the life 2. For the second which respect the preserving meanes take Directions for preserving it these directions 1. First if you would preserve uprightnesse you must preserve Preserving a● holy feare of God an holy feare of God you know the promise I will put my feare into their hearts and they shall not depart from me Jere. 32. Sinning is the only departing from God He never leaves us but for sin our departing is our unevenness and we never leave him but by sinne and our unupright walkings but that now which keeps us from departing is feare The feare of the Lord is a fountaine of life to depart from the snares of death Prov. 24. 27. If a man could alwayes keep an awful and powerfull regard to God that he stood in awe of his attributes and of his word he would keep plaine with God he would not transgresse for a morsel nor thinke that it may be safe for him to sin An Holy feare of God hath these two Properties 1. It puts the soule and actions in Gods presence one saith that God is all eye to see every thing and all eare to heare every thing so doth holy feare represent God as one who is now beholding all that I do and as one who understands my thoughts afar off from whom no not the whisperings of the minde nor the imaginations of my heart nor the closest and most secret actings can be concealed Its stands in awe of this all discovering God how can I do this great wickednesse and sinne against God saide Joseph when there were none but he and his mistresse and his God together Gen. 39. 9. I feare his justice that it will breake out upon me if I should dare to sin and I feare his mercy that it will draw off if I presume to offend Psal 4. 4. Stand in awe and sinne not Psal 119. 161. Princes also have persecuted me without a cause Why this might stirre up strange qualities in David O no but my heart standeth in awe of thy word q. d. I dirst not breake out to sin for all that thy word which I feared kept me in 2. Faith breeds and preserves uprightnesse and evennesse I ●aith preserves uprightnesse remember the Apostles caution Heb. 3. 12. Take heed brethren least their be in any of you an evill heart of unbeliefe in departing from the living God unbeliefe it is the root of all hypocrisie and appostacy that men are but halfe in duties it is because they do not indeed believe the extent of obedience to God and that they keep some private lust it is because they do not indeed believe the truth of Gods justice power wrath But saith causeth evennesse forasmuch 1. As it sets up prevailing argu●ents the soul never doubtes in the way but by the strength of false arguments either false pleasures or false profits is forcible with the heart insnares it we step aside alwaies by the cunning of error But faith not only discovers false inducements but also bringes better and stronger motives it knowes and teacheth where the soule will be at a losse and holds it off by the goodnesse and kindnesse and loving favour of God who would venture his comfortable aspect of God and sweet communion with Christ for a morsel of stollen bread or for one draught of unlawful pleasure 2. It constraines the heart to singular love of God and Christ the more faith the more love all true faith is inflaming for it sees and feels much love and therefore kindles much now much love raiseth much evennesse in walking whiles the love is kept up close to God the heart and life ordinarily are kept in an upright motion for all true love is tender and careful and pleasing 3. It purifies the heart Faith is like fire which hath one quality to ascend and another to burne so faith it negotiates for us at heaven and likewise it breeds more intrinsecall renovation of the heart by holinesse faith is the best friend to our graces the surest helpe to our affections the strongest prop to our duties and the sorest enemy to our sinnes No grace doth so much for the heart as faith our assistance for good and our resistance of evil depends most on it we finde experimentally that many sinnes then breake out when we loose the sight of God as long as we can eye God the soule is safe see God in his promises
heart in a clear glass through which any one may see the pulse and motion of it But this is sure that however in this life our actions and wayes may be wrapt up with many devices and hidden conceits of Hypocrisie Yet at the day of Judgement every man shall be throughly opened anatomized as it were and orderly cut up What his heart did love or hate what publick or private wickedness it did act and would not forsake what pretences to cover secret sinnings what bawlkings and declinings of known duties what ingenuous or sordid ends in all and every performance all these and more then these must be spread open at the day of Judgement before the eyes of men and Angels Of which did we believingly consider probable it is that we would attend to uprightness of heart and life to present a fair copy of our selves to the eye of God 3. A little unevenness will mar the comfort of a great deal of A little unevenness will marre the comfort of our uprightness uprightness There are two sorts of unevenness in walking One is Habitual and allowed which marres the just hopes and expectations of glory Forasmuch as that is either gross profaneness or cunning Hypocrisy both which are excluding sins Another is Actual which is a trip a stumble an out-stripping in the course of a pious walking I confess it may befall the best yet it will imbitter our soules All the good course which a man hath led and actions which he hath sincerely done cannot so much comfort him as many particular obliquities and unevennesses may sad and perplex him As in a Simile wrinch of the foot the present pain shuts out the sense of all former strength or as in the sickness of the stomack the present disease closeth up the sense of all health so the particular miscarriages in a Christian course they may fold up or at least suspend the tast of all the sensible comfort which uprightness formerly yielded and shot forth They may break the bones of David Psalm 51 and melt the soul of Peter and cast us both to darkness of trouble and sorrow and the labour of many active endeavours before we can see God to be our God again and be perswaded that our estate is really right and sound 4. That God is to be set up above all It is an hard yet it is That God is to be set up above all an usefull thing to ascribe unto God the Original of excellencies that he is God and that Power Might and Glory and obedience belongs unto him that he made us and not we our selves and that our beings as they are depending upon his power so our wayes upon his Rule and he is Lord of Lords all are under him and being the universal efficient he ought also to be our universal end God is set up above all other 1. When his Rule and Word swayes us against all other 2. When his Glory is singly or supreamly aimed at above all other things and both these complear uprightness FINIS THE THRONE OF MERCY AND THE TRIBUNAL OF JUSTICE ERECTED In the Remissibleness of All Sin and in the Irremissibleness of the SIN against the HOLY GHOST In two SERMONS on Mat. 12. 31. Preached before an Honourable Auditory By Obadiah Sedgwick B. D. LONDON Printed by T. R. for Adoniram Byfeild at the sign of the three Bibles in Corn-hill near Popes-head Alley Anno 1660. THE THRONE of MERCY AND TRIBUNAL of JUSTICE MAT. 12. 31. Wherefore I say unto you all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men THE best of actions are oft-times subject to misconstructions and a busie malice will either find or fasten spots upon the purest innocency This Chapter is the Map wherein you may read these truths Christ cannot speak or do but an envious Pharisee will pry and censure and slander Nothing is more offensive to an ill eye then the light and that which much afflicts an ill heart is the beauty of that good which it sees in or done by others Let Christs Disciples pluck but some ears of corn only to make necessary satisfaction to natural hunger verse 1. the Pharisee will presently pluck at Christ himself and murmur him not to be a pattern of obedience but a pattern of licentiousness Behold thy Disciples do that which is not lawfull on the Sabbath day verse 2. If Christ doth step from the field into the Synagogue verse 9. there also shall he have the catching attendance of the Pharisee Malicious hatred is like the shadow which will pursue the body of pious actions Here he no sooner finds a fit object for his mercy but the Pharisees endeavoured to divert the execution by an ensnaring scruple Is it lawful to heal on the sabbath daies verse 10. as though the duties of piety jusled out all offices of charity and that God who commanded sacrifice had not also preferred mercy They themselves would reach forth the courtesie of relief to a distressed beast v. 11. and therefore Christ might justly lend his hand of mercifull Charity to a diseased person verse 12. In the 22. ver He heals one possessed of a devil a miracle that begat amazement amongst the people and some kind of credence concerning his Divinity but in the Pharisees it vented plain Blasphemy This fellow casts out devils by the prince of devils verse 24. A bitter and high reproach and such as was for the truth neither probable nor possible For First Will Satan cast out Satan He that seeks the constant support will he willingly overthrow his own Kingdom Secondly Can Satan cast out Satan he that is cast out must be of lesser power and he that doth cast out must be of greater power but can Satan be greater and lesser then himself These Arguments could not but convince their judgements yet they did not extingush their malice they could not deny these to be truths yet will they pertinaciously deny their affections to them what they could not answer they would resist and though they saw sufficient reason and evidence yet they are resolved not to believe but to contemn Christ Wherefore I say unto you all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost c. Which words are like the two mountains of Moses Mount E●al and Mount Gorazim of blessing and of curses here is the sweetest mercy and the purest Justice or the Throne of Parts of the Text. Mercy and the Tribunal of Justice or here is set out two glorious Attributes of God Mercy and Justice I. You have the Throne of Mercy erected in these words The Throne of Mercy All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven wherein you have First The universality of the object not quoddam but The universality of the Object quodvis peccatum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every sin
or all manner of sin which yet must not be taken simply but restrictively not all manner of sin in comparison of sin to the rule that forbids it for then the sin against the Holy Ghost should be remitted but all manner of sin in opposition to the sin against the Holy Ghost i. e. any sin that is pardonable all manner of sin First Whether you respect the several species of sin may be remitted Noah's drunkenness Abraham's lying David's Adultery Manasse's Idolatry Peters denial of Christ were remissible Secondly Whether you respect the many degrees and intentions of sin either in the multiplied iterations of sinful acts or in the accessory aggravations of them from the force of circumstances in time place person object end c. And that we may not doubt hereof a special instance is given Blasphemy what it is in a sin of deepest dye and desert viz. Blasphemy this also may be remitted The schools tells us it is such a sin as either detracts from God that which belongs unto him of right or fastens on God reproachfully and disgracefully that which is not convenient to so pure and sublime Essence and Majesty And the Scripture tells us that it wounds or strikes through the name of God Lev. 24. 16. nothing so dear to us as our name and reputation and therefore we are sensible of the least indignities which touch there God doth himself profess how tender and jealous he is of his name and glory it goes very near to the quick yet such is the Miracle of his gracious disposition that he hath mercy even for Blasphemy I was a Blasphemer saith Paul 1 Tim. 1. 13. but I obtained mercy Only know that Blasphemy here pardonable is not that which springs from malice and hatred after conviction but that of ignorance as Pauls's or of infirmitie as Peter's Secondly The quality of the act shall be forgiven No The quality of the Act. such word as that for a sinner his life and joy lies in it Some by these words understand 1. Certainty of pardon Thus Theophylact who holds the event so sure that there needs no repentance to obtain pardon for sins not committed against rhe Holy Ghost This erroneous opinion need the kindness of a large pardon 2. Desert of pardon Thus Origen l. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 3. Qui peccat in filium hominis venia dignus est quia videtur in ignorantiam decidisse there is some ground of Apology in this this opinion is not very unsound but not genuine 3. Facility of pardon thus Jansenius in Concord Evang-Remittetur non quasi cunctis hominibus remittetur sed quod facile remittetur there is not so much difficulty to get these as the other to be pardoned 4. Not Eventum infallibilem sed possibilem shall be forgiven i. e. they are such as are not excluded from hope and offer of pardon not that they are certainly remitted to all in the event or that they deserve pardon or that they are easily pardoned they do not contract a peremptory incapacity of Mercy but that they may and if repentance follow shall certainly be forgiven Thirdly The indesiniteness of the subject unto men not The indefiniteness of the subject a man guilty of any manner of sin except that against the Holy Ghost but such is the rich grace of the great Court of Mercy that he may take out his pardon Christ doth not say not one sin but All sin not all sin of one kind but all manner of sin all sin of any kind shall be forgiven not to one man but to any one unto men unto any one of the sons of men whence we may conclude this comfortable truth DOCTRINE There is a possibility of pardon to any sinner for any sin except the sin against the holy Ghost THat there is a possibility of pardon for any Sinner whatsoever and for any sin whatsoever to all men for all manner of sin except the sin against the holy Ghost Hence the infiniteness of Divine Mercy is in Mica 7. 19. compared to the depths of the sea The Ocean is of that vast capacity that it can swallow up the highest mountains as well as cover the lowest Mole-hill And Isa 44. 22. it is compared to the strength of the sun which can scatter the darkest clouds as well as consume the thinnest vapours There is in man a continual fountain of sin in God a continual fountain of Mercy Zac. 13. 1. still running yea there is in man multitude of sins which stream from that corrupt fountain and there is in God Multitudes of Mercies to heal and stop those various currents Psalm 51. 1. According to the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out mine offences In the prosecution of this Truth I shall speak to three things 1. The Explication of the terms 2. The demonstration of the Truth 3. The Application The explication of the terms Forgiveness described It is an Act of God 1. The Explication of the terms 1. Forgiveness of sin is a gracious act of God in and through-Christ discharging the believing and repenting sinner from the guilt and punishment of sin It is an Act of God The Donatists hold that man could forgive the sins of men and St. Austin chalengeth them for so bold an Assertion that in this they are worse then the Pharisees who maintained this truth Who can forgive sins but God Object It is true Christ committed to his Apostles a Ministerial Absolution in his Name and virtute officii to bind and lose sinnes Sol. But if we speak of an Authoritative Right and immediate Power thus only God forgives Life and death are only in the absolute power of the Supream Lord and because our sins are directly committed against his Justice therefore it belongs only to his Mercy to forgive 2. It is a gracious Act. No way deserved by the sinner A gracious Act. Gratia indebita liberata said St. Austin Hence in Scripture you find our forgiveness like a stream issuing out of rich Mercy Great love and the riches of Grace and the Prophet speaking of forgiveness usually adjoynes For thy Mercy sake for thine own sake intimating that forgiveness is a free Act not purchased but given not merited but granted There is I acknowledge A double graciousness in the discharge of an offendor One without any satisfaction at all I am much mistaken if Socinus and his Atheistical Complices run not this way Another is When the satisfaction of a surety is accepted for the principal debt In this respect is our forgiveness gracious not that Justice is not at all satisfied but that the offendor himself never satisfied it he is discharged by the price which a blessed Mediator laid down 3. Discharging the sinner of guilt and punishment There Discharging the sinner of guilt and punishment are two things in sin One is the stain pollution or defiling quality of it and this is the Object of Sanctification which
hand An unprepared condition is wofull 2. How wofull is the unpardoned condition men go on in sin and make a work of it but speak slightly of it but the truth is 1. Sin makes God our enemy therefote it is called enmity in Sin makes God our enemy Ephe. 2. and a provocation because it stirs up the wrath of God against us which wrath if it should seize on thy soul Ah miserable man then thou canst neither suffer it nor decline it Jesus Christ standing in our stead felt some of it and it made him sweat drops of blood and to cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me How then shall a poor weak guilty sinner stand under the fierceness of his indignation 2. Sin unpardoned makes conscience our enemy As long as the Lord Conscience our enemy hath a quarrel with us for sin conscience may not speak any peace unto us Now the Lord be mercifull unto us if the Lord should awaken thy conscience and set thy sins in order who knows what would become of thee Knowest thou the power of conscience when it is opened to behold a God angry and sin unpardoned Read the vigor of it in Cain and the terror of it in Judas how it crached their spirits and brought the one to the utmost desperation and the other to the grave and hell in despite of all former advantages 3. And who can tell how soon he may die Go and listen Who can tell how soon he may die sometimes at a dying bed the person quakes and the bed trembles and the heart sighs what is it that the man speaks so to himself Ah Lord saith he I would not die and then tears trickle down his cheeks and his heart is ready to flie in pieces But why wouldst thou not die O no my sins are many I now see them and feel the bitter wrath of God for them Oh! my sins they are not pardonable and who can dwell with everlasting burnings or stand before the holy and just God 3. What unspeakable comfort is it to have our sins forgiven It is unspeakable comfort to have sin pardoned Son said Christ Mat. 9. 4. Be of good comfort thy sins are forgiven thee When the Israelites got through the red sea and looked back and saw their enemies all drowned what reviving was this if the drowning of corporal enemies be such a cause of joy who could but kill our bodies what cause of exultation for the drowning of spiritual enemies of sins in the depths of mercy which else would have destroyed oursouls How shall I express the comfort of it David saith all in one word The man is blessed whose iniquities are forgiven Now blessedness is the center of all joy and comfort Tell me brethren what think you 1. Of freedom from hell that you shall never see the place of the damned Is that a matter of comfort why If sin be pardoned hell is discharged There is no condemnation if Remission 2. Of Gods loving kindness David said it was life nay better then life Oh what is this God is reconciled unto me in Christ he looks on me not as a Judge but as a fathet with ardent affections and compassions why if sin be pardoned God is reconciled enmity slain all differences twixt you and God are taken off 3. Of the blood of Christ Is it worth the having or of interest in Christ it is worth the enjoying why if pardoned then doubtless united to Christ and how many and great are the benefits that result and follow upon union 4 Of Peace of conscience It is a mercy that Conscience can and may speak peace chear us up assure us stand for us against men and devils Why when sin is pardoned conscience may not accuse it hath nothing to do but direct us in good ways and to comfort us with the testimonies of our pardon and Reconciliation with God 5. Of all outward mercies Oh! what a life doth a pardoned sinner live If he looks up to heaven all is peace if he looks down to earth all is comfort he hath lands and sins pardoned too wife children honours friends yea and his sins are pardoned too 6. Lastly What think you of confidence in death When you are leaving the earth then to be assured your next journey is to heaven After grace to find glory would you ever be willing to die be confident in death live in death live after death O then get your sins whatsoevet they are to be pardoned 11. The Means if you ask what may we do to get our sins The means forgiven I shall answer briefly 1. Find out your sins and know them and that is done by the study of the Law which gives us the knowledge of sin 2. Beg of God for a contrite heart so as to be sensible of sin and weary of it and broken for it The weeping woman was forgiven Luke 7. 44 47. 3. And also for a penitential heart Repent saith Peter that your sins may be blotted out Act. 3. 19. See Isa 55. 7. 4. And for a Believing heart in the Lord Jesus In whose blood and for whose sake we obtain Remission of our sins 2 Cor. 5. 20. God was in Christ reconciling the world not imputing our sins 5. And for a forgiving heart see Mat. 6. 14 15. 6. Make it a daily and vehement petition for Repentance and forgiveness as did David Psalm 51. and sue all out in the name of Christ Object But these things are hard and laborious Sol. But they are for mercy O Mercy I perish without thee and therefore I will not live without thee sleep without thee die withou thee I will pray for mercy I will go to Christ for mercy and shall it seem so grievous to me to leave a sin which will damn me to get mercy which will save me II. The Tribunal of Justice erected in these words But the Blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven These words are the saddest expressions of purest Justice that ever were uttered Oh what is the height what the depth of this for a sinner to rise to such a peculiar degree and form of sinning as for ever to distinguish himself from all hope of mercy never never never to he pardoned In this there are two things to be inquired into 1. What this Blasphemy against the holy Ghost is What this sin is 2. The irremissibleness of this Blasphemy Touching the first of these there are several opinions and no marvel for to find the right nature of this sin is a work not of the least difficulty In Scripturis sanctis nulla major questio nulla difficilior invenitur saith Austin 1. The Novations thought every sin after Baptism especially Quid est quod Novato succenseamus tollenti poe●itentiam dicentique nullam eos veniam obtinere qui post lavacrum peccant Athan. Tom. 1. in hoc subject p. 776. denial of Christ in time of perfection
Hence doth this sin borrow its denomination against the Holy Ghost Now here I shall briefly open First How the Holy Ghost is taken Secondly What the Conviction by the Holy Ghost is 1. The Holy Ghost is sometime taken First Essentially How the Holy Ghost is taken for that one infinite indivisible independent Deity Secondly Personally as the third person in Trinity proceeding from the Father and the Son Thirdly Virtually In respect of Energy or operation and this Origen calls Proprietatem Loc. cit gratiae Aquinas bonum spirito appropriatum for though external operations be common to the Trinity yet the immediate manner of working is more common to one person then another as the work of Creation to the Father Redemption to the Son Illumination and Sanctification to the Holy Ghost Thus is the holy Ghost here considered in his proper operation viz. Conviction Secondly The operation or conviction of this person by the Holy Ghost consists in these particulars What this conviction is Objective Patifactio First The clear Revelation of Jesus Christ in the Gospel both in respect of Truth and Goodness of Truth that he is the true and only Son of God of Goodness that he is the Redeemer of the world and assured Saviour to Believers Secondly There is by the Holy Ghost wrought in them an Apprehension of all this by a supernatural illumination as in Heb. 6. 4. They were once inlightned not naturali lumine for by that of conscience every one is inlightned but lumine supernaturali by that of the Spirit Thirdly Not a sleighter apprehension but a more determinate Conviction so that they cannot deny the truth the light whereof shines with such clear beams upon the understanding The testimony of the conscience determinately assents with the testimony of the Spirit that this Revealed Gospel is indeed the Gospel of Christ and of salvation You know who I am and whence I come saith Christ to the Pharisees yea themselves professed so much because ye say we see therefore your sins remain John 9. Fourthly Nay yet undeniable Conviction is not all there is also some kind of approbation of those truths which the Apostle calls A tasting of the heavenly gift and a tasting of the good word of God and of the powers of the world to come A man may have a little taste of Honey so that he can say I know it is sweet and of wine that he can say it is comfortable In like manner they who sin this sin against the Holy Ghost may feel his operation not only in an objective revelation not only in a subjective apprehension not only in an undeniable conviction but also in some degree of approbation There may drop some effects from the truth imprinted upon the affections that the Conscience may be perswaded and give testimonie assuredly that these are the very truths of Christ All which is very evident in some of the Pharisees who had Christ revealed to them who did know and were convinced in their own hearts who Christ was and what his Doctrine was yet did they with inward malice break out against him and his Doctrine and in words poured the basest contumelies and blasphemies upon him and in their pertinacious workings did constantly persecute him even to the most reproachfull death of the Cross and all this against the clearest Convictions of the Holy Ghost in their own Consciences Thus for the nature of the Sin Consider the Irremissibleness The irremissibleness of this sin of it It shall not be forgiven unto men The Arrians Eunomians Macedonians and other Hereticks said the Holy Ghost was a Creature and the Object Photinians denied to him a real substance i. e. a Personality Vide Aug. Ep 50. ad Bonifacium Comitem Vide Athan. Tom. 1. in Ep. ad Serapionem p. 344. of this very Argument as Erasmus interprets it yet many of these repented if we believe Saint Austin and obtained pardon The same Father fitly removes this scruple by distinguishing between erroneous opinions concerning the Holy Ghost and this unpardonable blasphemy against the Holy Ghost It is one thing to mis-apprehend the Essence or personal subsistence and hereupon to pronounce according to the dark misconceits of the holy Ghost It is another thing to blaspheme Christ and his Gospel after clear conviction by the Holy Ghost this is the sin which shall not be forgiven Hence it is that this sin is called 1 John 5. 16. A sin unto death And H. b. 6. 4 6. A sin that casts a man into an impossibility of renewing And Heb. 10. 26. All sacrifice for this sin is taken away Which places strongly refell Concord Evan li. 2. de poenit c. 16. the errors of Jansenius and Bellarmine and other Papists who interpret this of the difficulty and the ra●ity only of this remission not of the impossibility Quest Why is it that this sin shall never be forgiven Answ 1. It is not because the Holy Ghost is greater Why is it pardonable then the Son for there is not Major and Minor where every one is equal in Nature and Dignity 2. Nor is it because this sin is so intensively great that exceeds the absolute power of God to forgive it or the infinite Merits of Christ Omnipotenti Medico nullus insanabilis occurrit languor Isidore But the Reasons given are these First Because it is Repugnant to the immutable Statute and Decree of the Divine Will It is Gods absolute pleasure It is Gods absolute pleasure not to pardon it who of himself sets the extent of his Mercy and the bounds of his Justice Though he will be pleased to allow a possibility of Mercy to other sinners yet as a King for some facts will not allow an Offender his book so God is pleased here to deny Mercy This Reason is true but because it is of common equity to some other sins therefore further satisfaction may be sought Secondly It directly resists and repudiats the matter of pardon and remission viz. The blood of Christ If a Contrariatur per ●e gratiae remissionis Alex Ale● Tom. 2. q. 155. m. 6. It rejects the pardon Patient could be healed only by one Medicine and he did wilfully reject that it is impossible he should recover not that the medicine is not of vertue but that he wilfully rejects this virtual Medicine so here there is no other name under heaven by which we can be saved but only the name of Jesus Christ no plaister but the blood of Christ which yet this sinner despitefully rejects c. Thirdly It contemptuously and with a wilfull obstinacy resists that spirit which should apply this pardon and Remission He willingly resists the spirit who should apply the pardon Pardon cannot be obtained unless the Spirit apply it but here the sinner fights against the Spirit of God and despites the Spirit of Grace and will not permit any operation any saving operation of the Spirit to fasten
sin what it doth imply p. 103 Sins Dominion in respect of Assent p. 105 Whether the Interruption of sinful Acts impeach sins Dominion Answered p. 115 Dominion of sin is either habitual or actual p. 116 Whether sin in Dominion may befall a regenerate person p. 117 Distinctions about it ibid. A compleat Dominion of sin cannot befall a regenerate person p. 118 Why David prayes against sin in Dominion p. 119 Why we should pray against the actual Dominion of sin ibid. Actual Dominion though it conclude not the absence yet it weakens the strength of Grace p 120 Actual Dominion though it cut not off the union yet it checks the Comforts p. 120 121 Distinguish betwixt Dominion of sin and a strong inclination to sin p. 112 Why we should pray against the habitual Dominion of sin p. 122 Instances of sins Dominion in many p. 126 127 Deceits about the Dominion of sin p. 129 viz. unsensibleness of its power ibid. Freedom from many sins p. 130 Opposition against some sins p. 131 132 Troubles after some sinfull actings p. 133 The Interims of sinning p. 134 The practise of Actions contrary to our outward sinnings p. 135 Tryals that sin hath not Dominion ibid. Motives to Thankfulness to those in whom sins Dominion is broken p. 144 Differences betwixt the Dominion of sin and particular victories of sin p. 154 155 Directions against the natural Dominion of sin p. 163 What strengthens the natural Dominion of sin ibid. What may break down the Dominion of sin p. 167 Directions against actual Dominion of sin p. 168 Wherein the actual Dominion of sin lies p. 169 The wayes and methods of sins Dominion p. 173 174 Doubts Doubts of troubled souls fearing they are under the Dominion of sin p. 148 Doubts from the strong inclinations of sin Answered p. 148 149 Doubts from some special sinfull Inclinations of sin Answered p. 150 151 Doubts from the prevailing of sin p. 153 Doubts from the renewed Actings of sin p. 157 F Faith FAith breeds and preserves uprightness p. 254 How it doth it p. 255 Falls The great Falls of others should work in us four things p. 79. 80 Fear Fear of God from what sorts of sins it preserves p. 38 Preserve a constant and humble Fear p. 171 Services done out of Fear do not conclude against uprightness p. 232 233 A double abstaining from sin and doing duty out of Fear p 234 A twofold Fear p. 235 Whether Abstaining from sin or doing duty springs out of naked Fear or Fear commixt with love ibid. Discoveries of springing from Fear p. 236 From Fear with love ibid. A holy Fear of God preserves Uprightness p. 253 254 Forgiveness Forgiveness of sin described p. 267 There is a possibility of Forgiveness in a twofold respect p. 268 269 Motives to get sin to be forgiven ibid. G Gods GOds eye upon the secret frame of the soul p. 14 Pardon of sin is Gods Act. p. 267 Gospel Take heed of regardless receiving the Gospel of Christ p. 293 How many wayes this is done ibid. Gracious It s a Gracious Act. p. 267 A double Graciousness in the discharging of an Offendor p. 268 H Hatred HAtred of sin infalliby argues the indominion of it Proved p. 138 Hatred of sin how it contributes to uprightness p. 252 Heart When the bent and purpose of the Heart is to please God what it improves p. 217 Holy Ghost vid. Blasphemy Conviction by the Holy Ghost what it is p. 286 How the Holy Ghost is taken ibid. Wherein the Conviction by the H. Ghost consists ibid. Holiness Holiness hath a Contrariety to all sin p. 15 Whether a man can be truly Holy that hath vile inclinations and Abominations working within answered p. 29 30 If Holiness hath our love sin hath not Dominion p. 138 What of Holiness and what not consistent with it p. 139 A little Holiness will not serve the upright man p. 203 Take heed of scorning of Holiness p. 294 Hypocrisie Hypocrisie distinguished p. 20 Hypocrites and upright persons described by their hearts p. 180 Hypocrisie a natural and common thing p. 195 An Hypocrite may go very far p. 197 Yet his heart is rotten p. 198 It is a foolish thing to be Hypocritical in service p. 199 Hypocrisie a most perillous sin p. 200 Three times wherein an Hypocrite may express forwardness in Duties p. 211 Hypocrisie how discovered by self-applause and vain-glory p. 247 248 Humbleness Humbleness of heart preserves uprightness p. 256 Three properties in it p. 256 I Illumination THE greatest Illuminations are not able of themselves to save a man p. 290 Inclinations There is a difference between frequent Inclinations in an evil man and in a good man p. 152. Dominion of sin and a strong Inclination to sin differenced p. 112. Inequalities All Inequalities in holy services do not conclude a man is not upright p. 241 Inequalities in holy duties arise either from weakness of strength ibid. Or from falseness of heart p. 242 What Inequalities arise from falseness of heart ibid. Two sorts of Inequalities about holy services ibid. Conclusions from grace p. 243 Infirmities Infirmities distinguish from presumptuous sins p. 83 84 85 Sinfull Inclinations vid. doubts vid. Holy Impenitent An Impenitent sinner is utterly inexcusable p. 273 Judgement A sound Judgement a means to keep a sound heart p. 165 Corrupt Judgement a main cause of Dominion of sin p. 170 The corrupt principles in the Judgement which must be removed p. 172 K Knowledge KNowledge of God a double kind of it p. 2 Knowledge necessary to get off the Dominion of sin and what knowledge p. 164 The greatest Knowledge may be in a subject void of grace and an enemy to it p. 291 Great Knowledge without grace adds to our misery p. 292 L Life THere is a difference betwixt a Life of motion and of Affection p. 152 Love Love of Sin a means to keep up the Dominion of sin p. 164 A predominant Love of God and his wayes a means of uprightness p. 252 M Manasseh MAnasseh his notorious sins yet pardoned p. 270 271 Mercy Improve Mercy aright p. 94 95 The intent of Mercy inpardon of sin demonstrated p. 269 The actual grants of Mercy and pardon to the greatest sinners p. 270 Mercy is the essential and natural disposition of God p. 272 The Influence of Mercy upon repentance p. 274 Mercy abused in presumptuous sinning p. 74 N Novatians WHAT the Novatians thought to be the sin against the Holy Ghost p. 280 O Obedience A Twofold Obedience unto sin p. 113 Distinctions about Obedience to the Commands of sin p. 114 P Pardon There is a possibility for a Pardon of any sinner and any sin except the sin against the Holy Ghost p. 266 Perswasions to make out for Pardon p. 275 276 We need Pardon p. 277 Pardoned How wofull is an unpardoned condition ibid. Comfort to have sin pardoned p. 778 Means to get our sins pardoned p. 779 Paul his sins were very high yet
pardoned p. 271 Prayers Divers qualities about our prayers p. 42 Many and great petitions may be put up at once in Prayer p. 41 Reasons of it p. 42 43 Presumptuous What Presumptuous sins are p. 53 Presumptuous sins described p. 54 55 Two things on which a presuming sinner doth imbolden himself p. 56 57 Why David prayes to be kept from Presumptuous sins p. 70 Reasons in respect of himself ibid. An Aptness in the best to Presumptuous sins ibid The best hath a self-inability to keep from such sins p. 71 Reasons in respect of the sins themselves p. 72 Presumptuous sins are amongst the highest ranks of sins p. 73 Mercy abused in presumptuous sinnings p. 74 Reasons in respect of others p. 75 Presumptuous sins in a godly man are examplary ibid. Such sins would be Trophies to evil men p. 76 Reasons in respect of God p. 77 We should be afraid of presumptuous sins p. 78 Degrees of presumptuous sinnings though very fearfull yet recoverable p. 81 Discoveries of presumptuous sinnings p. 82 Considerations to quicken our care against presumptuous sins p. 86 87 88 Rules to be kept from presumptuous Sins p. 89 Principles Two sorts of Principles which have an influence upon a man p. 169 R Regenerate WHether sin in dominion may befall a Regenerate person p. 117 Relation Our special Relation to God should work a care not to sin against him p. 50 Reasons of it p. 51 Repent A difficult thing to Repent p. 95 Repetition Repetition of sin is very fearfull p. 157 Repetition of sin may justly stagger a man about his condition p. 159 Resistance Whether all Resistance impair dominion of sin and no Resistance doth alwayes infallibly argue it p. 110 Restraint Restraint what it is p. 60 Whence it ariseth ibid. What it presupposeth p. 61 All Restraint of sin is from God p. 61 Alll evil men not equally restrained p. 61 Restraint of sin an act of mercifull providence p. 62 Both good and bad restrained from sin p. 62 63 God diversly restrains man from sin p. 63 Differences betwixt the Restraints of good men and evil men p. 65 66 67 How many wayes God restrains his servants from sin p. 68 69 S Sanctification SAnctification imperfect in this life p. 15 Secret Secret faults a holy person desires to be cleansed from them p. 6 In what respect sins are called secret p. 7 No sin secret to God ibid. Sin is secret to man in respect of the person sinning or the manner of sinning p. 8 9 Why we should desire to be cleansed from secret sins p. 11 Why secret sins deceive us most p. 12 Secret corruptions are the Christians trouble 16 Many wallow in secret sins with the Aggravations of it p. 18 19 The principle of sinning is secret p. 19 20 Discoveries of a desire to be cleansed from secret sins Negative and positive p. 21 Motives to inforce our care against secret sins p. 31 The Lord knows our secret sins early ibid. And will make them manifest p. 32 And judge them p. 33 A two-fold manifestation of Secret sins p. 32 Secret sins more dangerous then open p. 33 In what respects they are so p. 33 34 Aggravations of secret sins p. 34 35 36 Means to be cleansed from secret sins p. 36 Great sins should be feared as well as secret sins p. 45 Reasons of it p. 45 46 Secure Be not secure because of Gods present silence p. 92 93. Selfe-love Self-love implanted in every man and is natural p. 245 Duties may lawfully be discharged out of self-love p. 245 So it be a self-love in subordination not in competition p. 246 Servant A good man is Gods servant p. 47 Two forts of servants under God p. 48 His plea that we are Gods servants should be used to move the Lord to help us against sins p. 49 Service The Service of sin is the vilest Service p. 133 134 135 Gods gracious acceptance of our weak services p. 218 Divers considerations about our holy service p. 218 219 Sin Sin wherein the strength of it lies p. 13 Sins diversly distinguished p. 54 Beware of a course of little sins p. 89 Take heed of the Iterations of sin p. 90 A two-fold obedience unto sin p. 113 Several distinctions about obedience to the commands of sin p. 114 Every sin as acted is therefore the worse p. 119 The commands of sin are the vilest commands p. 122 123 How sin and we are enemies p. 137 Our strength against sin must be improved p. 17 Particular sinnings are compassable with a gracious frame not with a glorious condition p. 238 Tho things in sin p. 268 Sin vid. Dominion of Sin vid. Forgivness Sin makes God our enemy p. 277 Sin against the Holy Ghost vid. Blasphemy School-men wherein they place the sin against the H. Ghost p. 281 What this sin is called p. 288 Why it shall never be forgiven Negatively p. 288 Affirmatively p. 289 Means to preserve us from falling into this unpardonable sin p. 297 U Vain-glory vid. Hypocrisie Vpright Vprightness Case I. I fear I am not upright because of my particular sinnings Answered p. 120 Case II. Doubts from inequality about holy services Answered p. 240 241 Case III. Doubts of Vprightness from self-love answered p. 244. 245 Case IV. Whether all self-applause and vain-glory be incompatible with Vprightness Answered p. 246 247 Motives to get Uprightness p. 249 Means for the getting of upright hearts p. 251 Go to God for them ibid. Means for preserving Uprightness p. 253 Considerations to keep us upright p. 258 259 vid. Cheerfulness Uprightness vid. Fear of God vid. Faith vid. Holiness vid. Hypocrites vid. Hatred of sin vid. Humbleness of heart Some kinds of sinning contradict uprightness and what they are p. 138 139 A Christian should endeavour to be upright p. 177 What it is to be upright p. 178 Uprightness applyed severally p. 178 179. Uprightness expressed by sundry wayes and places p. 179 Uprightness described p. 182 Uprightness how it deals about Graces p. 185 Sins p. 186 Duties p. 187 Uprightness its end and scope p. 187 Why we should endeavour to be upright p. 189 God looks for it and at it ibid. It s the only thing he expects p. 191 It brings the whole man to God p. 192 God judgeth a man by it ibid. A difficult thing to be upright p. 201 To be upright is a possible thing p. 201 202 Discoveries of Uprightness p. 202 The principal care of Uprightness is the reformation of the heart ibid. The upright man makes conscience of all sins p. 204 How this may be discovered p. 205 Wherein Uprightness appears about sin p. 208 Uprightness discovered in our disposition about duties p. 209 By universality of obedience p. 210 By simplicity of obedience p. 212 By spirituality of obedience p. 213 By humility of obedience p. 215 An upright person the bent and purpose of his heart is to God p. 216 The upright person finds indulgence for offences p. 222 An